Kamloops City Council While managing his family's
Days Inn Hotel, Milobar made his first run for Kamloops City Council at the age of 32, winning his seat with 7,130 votes. Milobar ran on a platform of working to ensure
Royal Inland Hospital retain its status as a referral centre with further expansion/equipment to retain and attract new doctors and nurses, and the expansion of the local tax base by encouraging further development in Kamloops. He was re-elected as a city councillor in the 2005 municipal election. Milobar served on city council for two terms from 2002 to 2008, before being elected Mayor of Kamloops in 2008.
Kamloops Mayor On July 30, 2008, Milobar announced his plans to run for Mayor in the 2008 fall election with a platform of "A Balanced Approach" to decision making, and his goals of fulfilling tournament capital commitments, upgrading the sewage treatment plant, completing the Kamloops Sustainability Plan, working with agricultural groups on a new expo space, work on affordable housing options, safety initiatives between
Royal Canadian Mounted Police and By-Law staff, and to work with
BC Transit for continued sustainable transit expansion. Milobar was elected as the 39th mayor of Kamloops on November 15, 2008, receiving 3,147 ballots, or 74.13% of the total vote. He served three consecutive terms from 2008 to 2017, becoming the longest-serving mayor in the city's history. From 2006 to 2011, he also chaired the
Thompson-Nicola Regional District, making him the first Kamloops mayor elected to hold that position. a role he held until 2017.
BC Liberal/United Milobar was elected in the
2017 provincial election as a member of the
BC Liberal caucus, representing the electoral district of the
Kamloops-North Thompson. During this time, he served as the official opposition critic for Finance, for Environment and Climate Change, for Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation and was previously the opposition
House Leader. He was re-elected in 2020, winning by less than 200 votes.
Conservative Party of BC On September 3, 2024, Peter Milobar was announced as the
Conservative Party of British Columbia candidate for
Kamloops Centre. In October 2024, Milobar was reelected in the
provincial election, defeating
BC NDP candidate Kamal Grewal by about 2,000 votes. In February 2025, as a response to what he regards as residential school denialism emerging from his own party caucus, after
Dallas Brodie tweeted controversial statements, he delivered some deeply personal comments in the legislature. He emphasized his background and the fact that his wife and his kids are all Indigenous, and his son-in-law is a
Tk’emlúps band member. He also reaffirmed his commitment to pushing back against denialism recognizing that he would do this knowing that his comments would not be welcome in all spaces including his own party. ==Electoral history==