Shymko ran for the Ontario legislature in the
1971 provincial election, as a candidate for the
Ontario Progressive Conservative Party, in the riding of
High Park. He was defeated by
New Democrat Party incumbent
Morton Shulman by 7,281 votes. In the
1975 election, he ran again in the same riding against NDP candidate
Ed Ziemba. He was defeated by a margin of 1,773 votes. In 1978, Shymko was elected to the
House of Commons of Canada in a
by-election held on October 16, 1978, defeating future cabinet minister
Art Eggleton by 1,038 votes in
Parkdale. He served for seven months as a member of the official opposition acting as the Human Rights critic. For the
1979 federal election, his riding was redistributed into the newly formed
Parkdale—High Park electoral district. On May 22, 1979, following a highly contested race, and an electoral recount, he lost to
Liberal Jesse Flis by 74 votes. With the backing of the Canadian Government, he launched a historic initiative before the United Nations for the peaceful dissolution of the Soviet Union. On November 21, 1978, he presented to the President of the
UN General Assembly and its member missions a Memorandum on the Decolonization of the USSR which he coordinated on behalf of the Baltic, Belarusian, and Ukrainian World Congresses. In the
1981 provincial election, Shymko defeated Ed Ziemba by 2,680 votes. For the next four years, he served in the legislature as a
backbench supporter of the
Bill Davis and
Frank Miller administrations. Shymko was appointed
Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Community Services. He also chaired the standing committee on Social Development which published a report on violence against women. He also sponsored several Private Member's Bills. In 1986, through a PMB, he was successful in having Stalin Township in Northern Ontario renamed as
Hansen Township in honour of paralympian athlete
Rick Hansen. The Progressive Conservatives were reduced to a
minority government in the 1985 election and were defeated in the legislature in June 1985. Shymko retained his seat, defeating NDP candidate
Elaine Ziemba by 401 votes. After initially supporting Grossman, he endorsed
Alan Pope for the party leadership in late 1985. He lost to
Liberal David Fleet by 814 votes in the
1987 election. ==International experience==