He was active in organizing for the
Conservative party in the Balgonie area from at least as early as 1887. In 1893
Nicholas Flood Davin presented a petition on behalf of Hawkes to the House of Commons requesting repeal of the clauses of the
Northwest Territories Act mandating bilingualism in the courts and legislation of the territories and in 1894 the petition was again presented on behalf of Hawkes by the then independent MP
Dalton McCarthy. He contested the seat of
South Regina in the Legislature in the
1898 Northwest Territories General Election. The incumbent,
Daniel Mowat, had decamped to British Columbia, and in the months leading up to the election the newspaperman
William Trant was perceived to be the front-runner, and although many other men were discussed as potential candidates, by June "the only one who is admittedly an opponent is Mr. J.B. Hawkes of Balgonie." Ultimately Trant withdrew from the race and Hawkes ran as an independent against
J.W. Smith (Government) and the former mayor of Regina
William F. Eddy (Independent). An attempt was made during the campaign to use his pronounced Conservative loyalties against him, he responded by declaring that although he was opposed at present to the introduction of partisan politics in the Territorial Legislature, when they came everyone knew full well on which side he would be found. When it became known that he had won the election "a tremendous demonstration took place in Regina.... a procession was formed, bonfires lighted and the successful candidate was carried around the town shoulder high. Beer flowed like water and everything went to show the great popularity of the "People's Jim."" It was widely speculated that he would be the Conservative candidate for the Dominion House of Commons to replace his friend and sometime business partner
Nicholas Flood Davin but in the event he chose not to run. He was comfortably retained in his seat in the
1902 Northwest Territories general election with a substantially increased majority. Hawkes ran as an "independent government" candidate, whereas his opponent, Smith, gave himself the label of "straight government." In 1903 Hawkes introduced the charter bill requesting
Regina's incorporation as a city. He stated that, "Regina has the brightest future before it of any place in the North West Territories." The bill passed with no opposition and Regina became a City 19 June 1903. In 1904 he was on the committee founding St. Philip's Anglican Church in Balgonie. Following the creation of the province of
Saskatchewan, Hawkes stood as the
Provincial Rights candidate for South Regina in the
1905 general election. Provincial Rights was the moniker adopted by
Saskatchewan's Conservative Party from 1905-1912. Following his narrow defeat in 1905 against the Minister of Education,
J.A. Calder, Hawkes ran in 1908 for the Provincial Rights nomination in
Regina County, the area that Premier
Thomas Walter Scott represented. The nomination campaign against
Frederick Clarke Tate proved particularly acrimonious, and after Hawkes suffered a close defeat many of his supporters said that it was unacceptable that a man who had given so much for the Tory cause should be deprived of the candidacy. Although Hawkes moved to make Tate's nomination unanimous it was only under pressure and he declared that he did not believe in "that kind of business." He further stated that he had no intention of supporting Tate in the forthcoming election. The
Liberals, sought to take advantage of this division by asking Hawkes to defect, and it was reported that should he run as a Liberal or even as an independent in that riding he would receive "a good thing" from the government. Hawkes rejected the Liberal offers and subsequently announced that he would support Tate, and it was believed that his large following within the German community would be decisive in the election. Recognizing that Hawkes could not be bought, members of the local Liberal association then offered the nomination to R.A. Carman, solely because he was known to be a friend of James Hawkes, but ultimately Carman did not run either. With the support of Hawkes the Provincial Rights candidate took the seat. Hawkes would ultimately withdraw from public life due to a hearing problem but he remained an active supporter of the Conservative party to the end of his life. ==Later life and legacy==