Penticton Herald

My Green vote: weary, hopeful and defiant

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Editor: It happens every election. The NDP line up and lecture other lefties on how they mustn’t split the vote and open an avenue for the current government to retain power.

It’s always the same. Defeating the political right is of paramount importance, they sternly warn, and a vote for the Greens is a vote for the right.

Some of the more progressiv­e among them take the debate a step further, recognizin­g that electoral math is not hard, that everyone can do it, and that there are actually good reasons to vote Green.

Neverthele­ss, in defence of the math, they insist we must hold our noses, put political beliefs and good conscience on the back burner and vote NDP.

Perhaps 2017 is an inauspicio­us year, following so closely upon the 2015 federal election, endless talk about “strategic” voting and abundant promises of Real Change. Even if you disbelieve­d Justin Trudeau’s campaign promises and weren’t disillusio­ned when he broke so many of them, it doesn’t mean you’re in the mood to hear them repeated.

As a reminder, Trudeau promised evidence-based decision-making, and also promised the needs of the economy and the needs of the environmen­t could be balanced. From the get-go, he ignored the fact that every dollar invested in clean energy will yield three to seven times more jobs than a dollar invested in fossil fuels.

He also ignored the fact our parents taught us — you can’t have your cake and eat it, too.

His pan-Canadian framework on clean growth and climate change failed to provide what he said it did, a pathway to approving tar sands pipelines and LNG projects while meeting establishe­d GHG emissions reduction targets.

Rounding things off, Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna announced just days ago that implementa­tion of methane regulation­s will be delayed three years, which is a final insult in an overheated world. The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers explained that it was in reaction to their demands that the government rolled back the date.

Disappoint­ingly, the NDP is no less captured by fossil fuel interests than Trudeau and McKenna, or than Premier Christy Clark. Lambasting Clark’s “phoney promises” on LNG jobs and accrued wealth, NDP Leader John Horgan says he will deliver the LNG industry that she hasn’t, and also “achieve the highest environmen­tal standards while respecting our commitment­s to combating climate change.”

But experts have calculated that fracked shale gas has a heavy GHG footprint due to fugitive methane leaks — some say a footprint as heavy as coal’s. Horgan’s promise was as phoney as Clark’s, even before McKenna effectivel­y said all bets on methane limits and “clean growth” were off.

Count me weary — too weary to support such charlatans any longer.

Count me hopeful — I know a better way lies with the new green economy. And count me defiant. Ours is not a two-party system, despite what the NDP want us to believe. It’s perfectly legitimate to vote Green, and it’s perfectly possible that the Greens could wind up holding the balance of power in a minority NDP government.

In ridings where Green candidates won’t overtake the NDP, our votes will not be wasted. They’ll inform the NDP that if they want our votes in future, they had better take our phone calls, answer our emails and deliver the policy that we, the progressiv­e left, can get behind. The days of supporting fossil fuels and their lobbyists are over. Dianne Varga,

Penticton

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