“his campaign is also walking back comments carney made in french about cutting federal social transfers. earlier this month he said he would focus on reducing ‘operational deficits’ by cutting transfers to provinces and individuals. then on monday, in french again, he told a different interviewer he would never do such a thing.”
when it comes to explaining his position on carbon taxes, carney’s rhetoric is worthy of the bafflegab of the man he’s poised to succeed as prime minister — justin trudeau.
of all the nonsense trudeau has spouted to explain his support of carbon taxes, the most bizarre was his claim that he favours a carbon tax because, “i prefer a clean, market-based solution” to addressing climate change, as opposed to “the heavy hand of regulations” and “incentives … subsidies and rewards.”
except his plan to reduce industrial greenhouse gas emissions includes a carbon tax plus regulations and incentives, subsidies and rewards.
it contains, to cite four examples, clean electricity regulations, clean fuel regulations, methane regulations and regulated targets for zero-emission vehicles.
as for incentives, subsidies and rewards, according to parliamentary budget officer yves giroux, the trudeau government has earmarked $31.4 billion of federal taxpayers’ money — so far — to subsidize 13 electric vehicle and ev battery manufacturing projects in canada.