Pagtakhan was first elected to the
House of Commons of Canada in the
1988 federal election in the riding of
Winnipeg North, defeating incumbent
New Democrat David Orlikow who had held the riding since 1962. He became the first Filipino-born Canadian to be elected to the House of Commons. He was easily re-elected in the
1993 election, defeating New Democratic challenger
Judy Wasylycia-Leis. In the elections of
1997 and
2000, he was elected for the redistributed riding of
Winnipeg North-St. Paul. Pagtakhan served as
parliamentary secretary to
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien from 23 February 1996, to 15 July 1998. He was appointed to cabinet on 9 January 2001, and served as
Secretary of State (Asia-Pacific) until 15 January 2002. His appointment to cabinet marked the first time in over 75 years that an M.P. from north Winnipeg became a member of the federal cabinet. As Secretary of State (Asia-Pacific), Pagtakhan took on a number of tasks including representing Canada as Head of its delegation to the United Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects. On 15 January 2002, he was promoted to
Minister of Veterans Affairs and Minister responsible for Manitoba. In this capacity, he served on the Cabinet Committees on Economic Union, Social Union and Government Communications. During his tenure as Minister responsible for Manitoba (also known as the Senior Minister for Manitoba), Pagtakhan was part of the government that funded major projects in Manitoba such as the expansion of the
Red River Floodway and the
Canadian Museum for Human Rights. Pagtakhan also served as
Secretary of State (Science, Research and Development) from 26 May 2002, to 12 December 2003. On 12 December 2003, new
prime minister Paul Martin appointed him as
Minister of Western Economic Diversification. In this capacity he served on the Cabinet Committees on Domestic Affairs and Aboriginal Affairs. During his tenure in this position, Pagtakhan, amongst other things, announced funding for the Winnipeg-based International Centre for Infectious Diseases. Further redistribution pushed Pagtakhan back into the riding of
Winnipeg North for the
election of 2004. He lost to
Judy Wasylycia-Leis, who had been elected for
Winnipeg North Centre in 1997 and 2000. ==Life after politics==