Surma worked for former Toronto City Councillor
Peter Milczyn, and at the same time was the President for the
Etobicoke-Lakeshore Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario (PC) riding association. Surma worked on the Etobicoke—Lakeshore 2013 by-election for PC candidate. Following the election she was fired from her job at
Toronto City Hall.
2014 Toronto Municipal Election Surma ran for City Councillor in Ward 5 in the
2014 Toronto municipal election and placed second with 13.9% of the vote. PC party chair Walied Soliman cleared Ford of wrongdoing in 2018. successful motion in her first year in government in support of the
Toronto Catholic School Board's International Languages Program (ILP). In 2019 a nepotism scandal drew criticism from within the Conservative Party when it came to light her father, Miroslaw Surma, was working a policy adviser to Economic Development Minister Vic Fedeli. On August 27, 2020 she announced provincial funding to replace the Buttonwood hill school. On October 30, 2020 she announced a $26.4 million investment to build a new Catholic Secondary School in Etobicoke Centre and $36 million of funding for the refurbishment of
Bishop Allen Academy. In the summer of 2022, Surma worked with
Polish-Canadian residents in Toronto to successfully preserve the Polish Festival on
Roncesvalles Ave after the local Business Improvement Association proposed to change the naming of the festival excluding "Polish" into the festival. Surma and residents gained support from the Polish Government demanding the BIA to preserve the Polish name, and Polish heritage of the festival on Roncesvalles Ave.
Associate Minister of Transportation (GTA) On June 27, 2019, Surma was appointed as the Associate
Minister of Transportation (
GTA). She is the youngest female member of
Executive Council of Ontario. The same year, she spoke in favour of expanding subways in the Greater Toronto Area. She also spoke in favour of expanding the provincial
GO Transit rail network to provide two-way, all-day service on key segments of the network. In 2020, during COVID-19 pandemic, Surma introduced legislation to fast track construction on the province's new subway projects. This legislation also introduced the province's new
Transit Oriented Communities program which would allow the government to enter into new commercial agreement with partners to integrate transit in communities by building it closer to housing complexes, and downtown cores. On April 26, 2021 Surma introduced the Moving Ontarians More Safely Act regulating road safety, street racing, stunt driving.
Minister of Infrastructure Surma was appointed Minister of Infrastructure on June 18, 2021, during a cabinet shuffle, replacing
Laurie Scott. In June 2022 Surma's role as infrastructure Minister expanded to handle the province's real estate portfolios and managing provincial land assets including, the completion of the
Ontario Place Redevelopment. In March 2024 Surma's role as Infrastructure Minister expanded as The Ministry became responsible for managing The Province's Transit Oriented Communities Program. In October 2024 the NDP filed a complaint against Surma for "a pattern of preferential treatment" in the redevelopment of Ontario Place. In December 2024 she drew further criticism from Liberal, NDP and Green leaders when an Auditor General's report revealed the cost to redevelop Ontario Place would be $2 billion, almost six times what the government had initially said. In January 2025,
Ontario's Integrity Commissioner, J. David Wake, determined there was insufficient grounds to conduct an investigation against Surma because "Minister Surma was not the minister responsible for the majority of the period under scrutiny related to the project and the agreement with Therme." In June 2024 Surma ordered the closure of the
Ontario Science Center, after the Provincial Government found that there are a number of roof panels “in a distressed, high-risk condition” that could fail under the weight of snow this winter. The type of roofing panel, prevalent on the Science Centre buildings, has been found to be failing in other jurisdictions, prompting Ontario officials to take a closer look. In December 2024,
Ontario's Auditor General reported that a new Science Centre would be built by 2029 as part of the Ontario Place Redevelopment. In November 2024, Surma announced a $100 million deal with
Elon Musk's
Starlink to provide internet to 15,000 homes in
Northern Ontario. Surma has overseen the expansion of Ontario's broadband internet expansion to all rural and Northern Ontario communities, which is slated to be completed by 2025. In March 2025, in response to
economic tariffs imposed on Canada by President
Donald Trump, Premier
Doug Ford announced the immediate cancellation of the $100 million deal with Starlink. ==Election results==