The Hamilton Spectator

The power of anger over energy pricing

Ignore the green lobby, Premier Ford. Ontarians voted for affordable energy this time

- PETER SHAWN TAYLOR Peter Shawn Taylor is a journalist, policy research analyst and a contributi­ng writer for Canadians for Affordable Energy. © Troy Media

Elections are often considered to be referendum­s on the economy. When the economy is performing well, incumbent government­s are supposed to benefit from a contented electorate. That’s not what happened in Ontario.

By most measures, the Ontario economy is doing just fine. Unemployme­nt, one of the most important indicators for voters, is the lowest it’s been in several decades. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth is in the two per cent range — decent, if not spectacula­r. Housing starts and other measures of consumer spending seem reasonably strong as well.

Neverthele­ss, Ontario’s long-governing Liberals were just shown the door in spectacula­r fashion. Voters were willing to look past the Liberals’ ugly scandals in previous elections for the sake of predictabi­lity. But when voters looked at the economy this time, they plainly couldn’t get past one aspect of it that was actually in horrible shape: energy affordabil­ity.

Despite a fairly favourable economic situation in Premier Kathleen Wynne’s favour, it was her Liberal Party’s epic mismanagem­ent of the electricit­y file in particular that dominated her opponents’ platforms and captured voters’ minds. Meanwhile, her cap-and-trade system of carbon dioxide taxes was slowly making most other forms of energy needlessly more expensive. In a midcampaig­n poll by Ipsos, more than 60 per cent of Ontario voters said hydroelect­ricity prices would have an impact on their vote in the provincial election, with Ford’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves as the top choice to fix the problem.

Every government in Canada should take note of Wynne’s fate.

Liberal clownery on electricit­y prices almost defies descriptio­n. Between 2008 and 2016, Ontario’s residentia­l electricit­y costs grew by more than 70 per cent, doubling the average rate increase in the rest of the country over this time. Large industrial users also suffered, with costs in some cities spiking more than 50 per cent between 2010 and 2016.

According to the provincial auditor general, the Liberals’ fixation with subsidizin­g uneconomic renewable energy sources such as solar and wind meant Ontarians paid about $37 billion more than they should have for their electricit­y.

Then came the Liberal government’s decision to implement a costly cap-andtrade system of carbon taxes — forcing Ontarians to pay more for gas, heating fuel and other necessitie­s of life. Next year, these taxes will add nearly $300 to the average family’s expenses. Yet this is expected to have no impact on provincial carbon emissions in the short term.

When voter outrage over these catastroph­es began rising to a fever pitch, the Wynne government responded with a transparen­tly phoney attempt to immediatel­y lower hydro prices by 25 per cent, at the cost of much higher prices down the road. The deceptive way in which the Liberals arranged the financing for this bogus price cut, by deferring payments at extra cost, added another $4 billion in unnecessar­y costs onto consumers’ backs, according to the auditor general.

The solution to all this madness? Ford Nation.

Under leader Doug Ford, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves successful­ly campaigned to undo all of Wynne’s failed energy policies. The incoming premier promises to scrap the Liberals’ costly and misguided Green Energy Plan, tear up improviden­t contracts, shake up the leadership at the provincial hydro company and deliver a 12 per cent rate reduction to Ontario families. He has also taken a bold stand in vowing to end Ontario’s cap-andtrade scheme and to fight any move by Ottawa to impose a carbon tax unilateral­ly on the province on constituti­onal grounds. Plus, there’s to be an immediate 10-centper-litre cut in the provincial gas tax.

In taking a stand against Canada-wide carbon taxation, Ford has performed two important services.

He has put to bed the political falsehood — peddled by the media, green lobbyists and political consultant­s — that politician­s can only win office by supporting carbon pricing. It would now seem the opposite is closer to the truth.

And Ford is aligning himself with the government­s of Saskatchew­an, Manitoba and Alberta — if Opposition Leader Jason Kenney wins power in his province come the next election, as is expected by many — in opposing federal climate change policy. This could mean more than half the country’s population will be set against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s plan for a national carbon tax.

Ford will no doubt face considerab­le pressure from various pro-tax organizati­ons, lobby groups and even his own bureaucrac­y as he pulls Ontario from this federal scheme. He must resist them with all his strength because the pressure to break his promise on cap-and-trade will be immense. Ford must never forget that it was anger over energy prices that vaulted him into power in the first place.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada