Ferguson ran for
alderman for the
Kitchener City Council in 1972 when he was only 18 years old and still in high school at
Cameron Heights Collegiate Institute. He ran again in 1979 this time being elected. He remained as city councillor until his election to the provincial legislature in 1990. He was a champion representing the 'little guy' and on one occasion residents of his ward complained about dust coming from gravel being spread on the road. He requested the city spray water to keep the dust down but he was ignored. So he brought in a sack of gravel to a city council meeting and dumped the gravel into a bucket which generated a considerable amount of dust and his point was made. Ferguson ran as a candidate of the federal
New Democratic Party in the
Canadian general election of 1984, but finished third in the riding of
Kitchener behind winner
John Reimer by 12,892 votes. In 1990, Ferguson ran again, this time as the provincial NDP candidate in the riding of
Kitchener defeating incumbent
Liberal David Cooke by 6,019 votes. He initially served as a
parliamentary assistant to
Dave Cooke, the
Minister of Housing and Municipal Affairs and was promoted to
Minister of Energy on July 31, 1991. In October 1991, Ferguson was involved in a minor controversy surrounding executive compensation at Ontario Hydro. He revealed in the legislature that the salary of the former chairman was $540,000. The Liberal opposition argued that this was a breach of privacy rules and that he should resign. Ferguson refused to resign and referred the issue to the Privacy Commissioner. On February 13, 1992, Ferguson resigned from the provincial cabinet to deal with allegations that he had committed a
sexual assault while working as a guard at Grandview. He was acquitted in 1994. From the time when he was charged to his acquittal he sat as an independent. After his acquittal he was reinstated by the NDP and was appointed as a parliamentary assistant to the Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. He resigned from the legislature on October 8, 1994, in order to run for
mayor of Kitchener but he was defeated. He also tried to get elected to the same council in a 2002 by-election but was again defeated.
Cabinet positions ==Later life==