Regina Leader-Post

Opposition critic assails Goodale during visit to the city

- ARTHUR WHITE-CRUMMEY awhite-crummey@postmedia.com

Regina’s Italian Star Deli became the stage of some political theatre Thursday, with a senior Conservati­ve shadow minister stopping by to sip espresso and campaign against the federal Liberals.

Pierre Poilievre, an Ottawa area MP and the Conservati­ve finance critic, made stops in Saskatoon and Regina this week — using the occasion to criticize the federal carbon tax, pipeline policies and small business tax changes.

Italian Star played into that last point, with Poilievre holding out his party as the best hope for the deli’s owner, Carlo Giambattis­ta.

“How important is it to keep this family business in family hands?” Poilievre asked.

The subtext was Poilievre’s apparently firm belief that a reelected Liberal government would reintroduc­e taxes on capital gains and investment income for private corporatio­ns, measures it partly walked back earlier this year.

There is so far no indication they’ll return. But Poilievre used a visit to the Regina Chamber of Commerce on Thursday to claim the measures are only temporary “on ice.”

“They simply acknowledg­ed that they were politicall­y impossible this close to an election and they will bring them back within the first several months if they are reelected,” he said of the Liberals.

Poilievre repeatedly named Regina-wascana MP Ralph Goodale in his speech at the chamber, in a bid to connect him to those policies. During an interview shortly after, he went further, calling the federal public safety minister “the epitome of Liberal arrogance.”

The comment came as Poilievre assailed Goodale’s recent comments on the impact of Ottawa’s carbon backstop.

Poilievre has requested an estimate of the cost of the tax for individual­s, but the federal government has only released courser-grain economic analysis.

He said his constituen­ts in Ottawa, who recently voted in the province’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Party, have “the same basic grievances” as Saskatchew­an people.

He commended Scott Moe’s government for being the only one “with the courage to stand up and fight back.”

“With the election of Doug Ford in Ontario, I’m happy to say: Help is on the way,” Poilievre told the crowd at the Chamber even, which included provincial MLAS like Ken Cheveldayo­ff.

Ford seems ready to join Moe’s court challenge over the carbon tax, a move Poilievre said may “possibly” succeed.

But he suggested that the future of carbon pricing won’t be decided in Regina or Toronto courtrooms, but at the next federal election.

The party apparently views Regina as a place to pick up a seat or two.

Poilievre appeared at a campaign event for Regina-lewvan candidate Warren Steinley on Wednesday.

“It’s really good to have him out here as a hard working finance critic and really just have an unofficial kickoff for the campaign,” said Steinley, who predicted that the carbon tax will be among the major ballot questions of the 2019 election. He said it is already resonating on the doorsteps of Reginalewv­an.

“I think we’re going to be competitiv­e in every seat in Saskatchew­an,” said Steinley.

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