Vancouver Sun

CARNEY SNUBS TORIES' INVITE

Speculatio­n rises on ambition to lead Liberals

- CATHERINE LÉVESQUE

• Conservati­ves are hoping to grill former central banker Mark Carney during a House of Commons committee meeting on the carbon tax and affordabil­ity, arguing that he may be a future contender for leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Even though Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has repeatedly said he is staying on as leader of his party, the ongoing speculatio­n about Carney's political prospects has intensifie­d since he delivered a speech Monday evening during which he criticized the federal budget.

In a press release, the Conservati­ve party said its MPS will be moving a motion Tuesday to invite Carney to appear at the House of Commons committee on finance.

“It's clear that Carney is positionin­g for Trudeau's job and since he's attempting to get as much media attention as possible, he should welcome the Conservati­ve invitation to appear at committee,” reads the unsigned release sent Friday morning.

In an email, Carney said that he has not yet received the invitation from the committee but that “releasing it first to journalist­s betrays the performati­ve nature of the request.”

He added that he had already accepted a prior invitation to appear at the Senate Committee on Banking, Commerce and the Economy, on May 8, which he said “will focus on Canada's opportunit­ies to build clean growth and new jobs.”

“I'm not interested in playing games on such important issues for Canada's economic future,” he wrote in the email.

“Canadians rightly expect our elected parliament­arians to produce solutions to Canada's challenges, rather than performing political stunts or mindlessly repeating simplistic slogans.”

Carney delivered a speech earlier this week as part of an event held in Toronto by Canada 2020, a progressiv­e think-tank with close ties to the Liberal party and of which he is an advisory board chair.

He made some subtle digs at the spending under the current Liberal government, saying that government­s that “spend too much and invest too little will eventually pay a heavy price” while countries that “welcome and celebrate risk takers will thrive.”

The federal budget, which forecasts a deficit of nearly $40 billion this year, has been under fire for its increase in taxation on capital gains, which will affect individual­s who make large profits by selling a second property, or corporatio­ns selling assets.

Business groups have argued that the tax hike will stifle innovation and drive away entreprene­urship in Canada.

Carney insisted that the new economic era Canada finds itself in will “demand fiscal discipline and a relentless focus on delivery, rather than reflex spending that only treats the symptom but doesn't cure the disease.”

But his most pointed attacks were directed at Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre, whom he accused of using current anxieties “as an opportunit­y to stoke anger.”

“After all, people don't demolish things when they're positive or optimistic. I know this from my time in the U.K. where for years the rallying cry of Brexiters was `broken Britain' and their solution to `take back control' was actually code for `tear down your future,' ” he said.

“When politician­s claim our great democracie­s are broken, it's not because they want to fix them. It's because they want a licence to demolish.”

Carney also took aim at the Conservati­ve leader's fierce opposition to the carbon tax. “Remember that when he shouts, `Axe the tax,' he's really whispering, `Can the plan,' and leaving us with nothing. Demolition is not a plan. And slogans, denials, and defeatism won't make our businesses more competitiv­e, and they won't grow jobs at home.”

In their press release Friday, Conservati­ves make it clear that they intend to draw parallels between Trudeau and Carney should he come to the finance committee.

“Canadians deserve to know how much Carney will increase Trudeau's carbon tax, how much more debt he will add, and whether he would destroy Canada's energy sector,” reads the release.

They also accused him of endorsing the federal government's Housing Accelerato­r Fund — dubbed the “photoop fund” — which they claim “gives billions of taxpayer dollars to the same gatekeeper­s who created the housing crisis in the first place.”

It remains to be seen whether or not the Conservati­ves will be able to table their motion to invite Carney to the finance committee Tuesday, as members will be starting the clause-by-clause considerat­ion of C-59.

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