Johnson was elected mayor of
East York, and in 1988, he convinced Ootes to run for city council. In 1992, Ootes retired from Imperial Oil to become a full-time politician. Two years later, he was elected to the council of
Metropolitan Toronto. When
Toronto and five suburban municipalities were amalgamated in 1998, he was appointed deputy mayor of the new city of Toronto, and held that position until 2003. In that role, he was widely seen as the second only to the mayor in power and influence. While Lastman relished publicity and spectacle, Ootes worked quietly and effectively to advance the mayor's initiatives, putting together ever-changing council majorities from day to day. In the
2000 municipal election, he faced what was thought would be a serious challenge from school board chair
Gail Nyberg. The election mostly focused on Ootes' strong support of a scheme to ship Toronto's garbage to the
Adams Mine, an abandoned mine outside of
Kirkland Lake,
Ontario.
Liberal Party supporters supported Nyberg but Ootes had the strong support of the mayor and several other city councillors, and won re-election by 7,660 votes to 4,391. Ootes was widely considered one of the likely candidates to succeed Lastman. However the
Conservative money and supporters mostly went towards former Rogers Cable President & CEO
John Tory, and Ootes chose not to run. The left-leaning
David Miller narrowly defeated Tory in the
2003 election to become mayor. Ootes was replaced as deputy mayor by
Joe Pantalone,
Sandra Bussin, and
Mike Feldman jointly for the next council term. Since then, Ootes has served as the unofficial head of the councillors opposed to Miller's left-leaning initiatives. During his tenure on the police services board, Ootes and Justice Hugh Locke were instrumental in selecting the more centrist
Bill Blair over
Mike Boyd to succeed
Julian Fantino as Police Chief. Ootes ran in the
2006 municipal election with the slogan "Proven Leadership", defeating Diane Alexopoulos by twenty votes. On July 16, 2007, Ootes voted with a majority of councillors (23-22) to defer voting on mayor Miller's proposed vehicle registration tax and land transfer tax until after the
October 2007 provincial election. Ootes said this was a wakeup call to the city that citizens want more control of city spending. On October 22 council voted to support the new taxes (26-19). Ootes was among those who dissented. He argued that while his side lost the final vote, they had won the public opinion debate. Ootes announced in January 2010 that he would not run for re-election after his term ending. After the 2010 Toronto municipal elections, mayor-elect
Rob Ford selected Ootes to chair his transition team. ==References==