CBC Edition

PM says he doesn't 'understand' NDP's climate stance as Singh appears to shift on carbon tax

- Brennan MacDonald

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he sympa‐ thizes with NDP Leader Jag‐ meet Singh but no longer understand­s his party's po‐ sition on climate change af‐ ter Singh appeared to waver on his support for the consumer carbon tax.

"I feel for the NDP and for Jagmeet. This is a hard mo‐ ment. There are political headwinds," Trudeau told re‐ porters Friday at a press con‐ ference in Vaughan, Ont.

"There's a lot of political pressure. I'm certainly feeling it, everyone should be feeling it, by folks out there who are worried about affordabil­ity, who are worried about cli‐ mate change."

Speaking at the Broad‐ bent Institute's annual policy conference in Ottawa on Thursday, Singh said his party will put forward a cli‐ mate policy that won't divide Canadians and accused Trudeau of using the climate crisis as a political wedge.

"It can't be done by letting working families bear the cost of climate change while big polluters make bigger and bigger profits," said

Singh. "We all lose if we make Canadians choose between an affordable life and fighting the climate crisis."

After the speech, Singh told reporters he doesn't want the burden of fighting climate change to fall on working people - but he wouldn't say whether that means he wants to get rid of the consumer carbon tax.

In a statement issued to CBC News, Singh said the NDP has not changed its po‐ sition on the consumer car‐ bon price.

"What we have done is commit to building a climate plan to make big polluters pay, bring down costs for Canadians, meet our emis‐ sions targets and unify peo‐ ple in taking on the climate crisis. Despite being in power for nine years, the Liberal government has failed to do this," wrote Singh.

WATCH | Trudeau on NDP's carbon tax stance: 'This is a hard moment'

The prime minister sug‐ gested Friday morning that Conservati­ve arguments against the consumer carbon tax are "resonating with the NDP."

"I don't entirely under‐ stand the position of the NDP in pulling back both from af‐ fordabilit­y measures and from the fight against climate change, but I can assure everyone that this govern‐ ment, my government, will continue to step up on the fight against climate change. We'll continue to put more money in families' pockets," Trudeau said.

The prime minister is re‐ ferring to carbon tax rebates when he claims the NDP is pulling back from "affordabil‐ ity measures." The Liberal government insists that eight out of 10 families in jurisdic‐ tions where the federal car‐ bon tax applies receive more money in federal rebates than they pay under the tax.

Reacting to Singh's com‐ ments, Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre said Thursday on social media the NDP leader was "jumping ship" on the carbon tax.

"Three weeks ago, Jag‐ meet Singh voted with his coalition partner Justin Trudeau to hike his costly carbon tax," Poilievre wrote. "He's desperatel­y trying to run from his own record. But we won't let him forget, and we won't let him try to fool Canadians."

The Liberal government survived a non-confidence motion on the carbon tax in March with the backing of the Bloc Québécois and NDP.

"The Conservati­ves want to pretend the climate crisis isn't real. With threats of a record forest fire season looming, we can't afford the do-nothing approach of the Conservati­ves," Singh wrote in the statement to CBC News.

David Coletto, founder and CEO of polling firm Abacus Data, said he thinks Singh may be trying to differ‐ entiate New Democrats from Liberals in the minds of voters.

"I think the Conservati­ves are really eating into a lot of that NDP support. Most of those that have switched from the Liberals to Conserv‐ atives, and a sizeable num‐ ber of former New Democrat supporters - those that voted NDP in 2021 - are going Con‐ servative," Coletto said in an interview with CBC News.

"This might be a strategy to, on the one hand, signal that maybe they are still fo‐ cused and care deeply about climate change but on the other hand they are very sen‐ sitive to people's concerns about the cost of living, and depart from what has be‐ come a signature policy issue of the Liberal government."

In the last three elections, the NDP has run on platfor‐ ms that include a price on carbon.

The federal carbon price increased to $80 per tonne on April 1. That increase means drivers pay an extra 3.3 cents per litre at the pump.

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