Lethbridge Herald

Carbon tax issue may sway N.B. vote

N.B. TORIES SAY ELECTION WILL BE ‘A REFERENDUM ON CARBON TAX’

- Kevin Bissett THE CANADIAN PRESS — FREDERICTO­N

New Brunswick’s Tory leader is aiming to make the federally mandated carbon tax the defining issue of the campaign for the Sept. 24 provincial election.

“I think this election is going to be a referendum on carbon tax. There will be other issues but that certainly will be a main one,” Blaine Higgs said Tuesday.

Higgs said he’ll refund any carbon tax levied on consumers by Ottawa, by using federal funding to bring in equivalent tax cuts under provincial control.

He made the announceme­nt in a followup to Monday’s campaign pledge that, should he win the election, he’ll oppose the carbon levy the federal government is requiring.

“We are saying we are taxed enough. We are not going to be putting this on and we’re going to stop this carbon tax debate and we’re going to work with other provinces to see that it doesn’t happen,” Higgs said, joining forces with his counterpar­ts in Ontario, Saskatchew­an and Alberta.

Their approach mirrors their Tory cousins in Ottawa. In a speech to the federal party’s convention last week in Halifax, Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer promised that his first act as prime minister would be to get rid of the federal government‘s carbon tax scheme.

A federal vote is scheduled for October 21, 2019.

Ottawa has said the provinces must place a levy on carbon, and that it should be sufficient to meet federal plans for carbon reduction.

The Trudeau government has said that if provinces don’t place a levy on consumers aimed at reducing their consumptio­n of fossil fuels, Ottawa will do so, and Ottawa will then have final say in how the revenue-neutral tax is funnelled back to provincial taxpayers.

The New Brunswick Liberals under Premier Brian Gallant have said they’ll take a portion of the existing excise tax on gasoline and dedicate it towards a climate change fund, although it is unclear whether that will meet Ottawa’s requiremen­ts.

“For us, what’s important is that we play our role to fight climate change in a way that respects New Brunswick’s economic realities, challenges and opportunit­ies,” Gallant said Monday.

“The plan we’ve put forward will phase out coal by 2030, will ask the largest emitters to pay their fair share when it comes to the emissions they’re putting out, and we will ensure there will not be one cent more on consumers in our province.”

Higgs has said a Tory government would take other measures to ensure New Brunswick will “continue to meet or exceed our emission targets” for carbon and other greenhouse gases, though few specifics have been released to date.

Gallant said the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve don’t have a real plan.

“Their lack of a plan demonstrat­es they don’t take climate change seriously. Also, they are, for political reasons, neglecting to put a plan forward that will protect consumers in our province,” Gallant said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada