Farnan ran for the federal
New Democratic Party in
Cambridge during the
1980 federal election. He came second, 3,080 votes behind
Progressive Conservative Chris Speyer. He also served on the Cambridge city council for the period in the 1980s. Farnan was elected to the Ontario legislature in the
1987 provincial election, defeating
Liberal candidate
Claudette Millar in the provincial riding of
Cambridge (incumbent
Progressive Conservative Bill Barlow finished third). The NDP were the official opposition in this period, and Farnan served as his party's critic for Correctional Services and Tourism and Recreation. The NDP won a majority government in the
1990 provincial election, and Farnan was re-elected by a landslide in Cambridge. On 1 October 1990, he was appointed the Rae government's first
Solicitor General and
Minister of Correctional Services. As Solicitor-General, Farnan introduced employment equity provisions for Ontario's police force. He also established a "common pause day" which continued the province's previous restrictions on
Sunday shopping. In the spring of 1991, he became involved in a minor controversy concerning two letters which had been sent from his staff to Justices of the Peace in Ontario, one of which requested the review of a case. This was seen by some as inappropriate interference from his office, and while Farnan did not write the letters himself, he was nonetheless dropped from cabinet on 31 July 1991. In September 1991 he was appointed Deputy Chairman of the house and he served in that role for the next two years. On 17 June 1993, Farnan was re-appointed a
Minister without portfolio responsible for
Education and Training. In this capacity, he served as an assistant to
Minister of Education Dave Cooke. Farnan returned to a full cabinet position on 21 October 1994, having been appointed
Minister of Transportation. In 1994, Farnan was one of twelve NDP members to vote against
Bill 167, a bill extending financial benefits to same-sex partners. Premier
Bob Rae allowed a free vote on the bill which allowed members of his party to vote with their conscience. The NDP were defeated in the
1995 provincial election, and Farnan lost the Cambridge seat to
Progressive Conservative Gerry Martiniuk by about 5,500 votes. He ran a second time for the
House of Commons of Canada in the
1997 federal election, but finished third against
Liberal Janko Peric.
Cabinet positions ==After politics==