Medicine Hat News

Pierre Poilievre threatens no confidence vote on carbon price, Guilbeault calls him a liar

- MIA RABSON & STEPHANIE TAYLOR

The minority Liberals are facing increasing political pressure on their signature climate policy, as Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre triggers a no confidence vote in the House of Commons.

As the pile-on mounts and provincial politician­s — including Liberals — vow to join the fight, Environmen­t Minister Steven Guilbeault is openly calling Poilievre a liar.

He’s also challengin­g the

Tory leader to put up an environmen­tal plan that eliminates as many emissions as carbon pricing does without costing Canadians a cent.

Conservati­ves have opposed the Liberal climate policy from the start, but the backlash has grown to new heights since Poilievre took the helm.

Under his leadership, the Tories have successful­ly seized upon the post-COVID-19 costof-living and inflation crisis as a platform to convince Canadians the carbon price is making their lives much less affordable.

Poilievre is demanding that the government back off from its plan to raise the carbon price another $15 per tonne as scheduled on April 1.

The hike will add about three more cents to the price of a litre of gasoline.

“I’m giving Trudeau one last chance to spike his hike,” Poilievre said Wednesday in speech to caucus members that was open to media.

“If Trudeau does not declare today an end to his forthcomin­g tax increases on food, gas and heat ... we will introduce a motion of non-confidence.”

The Liberals made no such move, and the confidence vote is scheduled for Thursday.

It marks the 10th time in the past 18 months of Poilievre’s leadership that the Tories have moved a motion in the House of Commons calling for carbon pricing to be scrapped or significan­tly amended.

To date, none of them have succeeded.

Government House leader Steven MacKinnon said Wednesday he had no fears of losing Thursday’s vote. Both the NDP and Bloc Quebecois support carbon pricing.

Poilievre’s speech followed a new ad campaign and another series of “axe the tax” rallies and town halls, where the leader drew large crowds in Toronto and across Atlantic Canada.

Following the blitz, Guilbeault accused Poilievre of “lying” about the carbon price.

The environmen­t minister said Tuesday that the Tories are falsely linking it to inflation, ignoring the existence of rebates and failing to propose a plan that recognizes the cost of climate change.

“Climate change is real, it’s impacting Canadians and it’s costing Canadians, and you’ll never hear Pierre Poilievre talk about that,” he said.

“The more we wait, the more we will suffer the impacts of climate change, the more Canadians will be impacted by heat domes, by forest fires, by flooding, by coastal erosions, by sea level rise.”

Guilbeault said that according to Environmen­t Canada analysts, carbon pricing will account for about one-third of emissions reduction in Canada by 2030.

That amounts to about 75 million tonnes of greenhouse gases, which is what 17 million passenger vehicles emit in a year.

“If there’s someone, somewhere that can show me a measure that comes at no cost to Canadian taxpayers because it’s revenue-neutral, that can give us a third of our emission reduction, I’d like to hear it,” Guilbeault said.

“Cause I’ve been working on this for 30 years. That’s all I’ve done as an adult, working on climate change. And there’s no such measures lying around.”

The Liberals have been on their heels on carbon pricing almost from the outset.

They’ve struggled to explain to Canadians a complicate­d policy that makes the cost of buying fossil fuels gradually more expensive, even as the government sends rebates to households to offset those costs.

Those struggles have intensifie­d over the last few months.

The first real sign of fissures among Liberals over carbon pricing came last fall when Trudeau announced, with his Atlantic caucus behind him, that the government would exempt heating oil from the policy for three years.

In Atlantic Canada, about one-third of homes use heating oil. That compares to fewer than one in 10 households everywhere else in the country.

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