Woods was elected to the
House of Representatives at the
1990 federal election, winning the seat of
Page for the
Australian Labor Party (ALP) from the incumbent
National MP
Ian Robinson. During the leadership tension between
Bob Hawke and
Paul Keating, Woods was initially a Hawke supporter but switched his support to Keating prior to the
second leadership ballot in December 1991. He was elected as chair of the
ALP caucus's primary industry and resources committee, where he served as a spokesman for other rural and regional MPs. In 1993 he publicly criticised the
Industry Commission's recommendations for
Australia Post to close country post offices. He also attracted attention in 1994 by publicly opposing environment minister
David Beddall's decision to approve the expansion of the woodchipping industry on the North Coast. Woods narrowly retained his seat at the
1993 election, despite the Forest Products Association and other logging industry bodies actively campaigning against him for his anti-woodchipping stance. He was left with a 0.3 percent margin, with
Greens preferences crucial in his re-election and the re-election of his ALP colleague
Neville Newell in the neighbouring seat of
Richmond. He lost his seat to
Ian Causley of the National Party at the
1996 election in the nationwide swing to the
Coalition. ==State politics==