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Singh defends NDP carbon price position — without directly supporting a consumer levy

OTTAWA — The federal leader of the New Democrats spent Monday insisting his party's position on carbon pricing remains unchanged.
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Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh insists his party's position on carbon pricing remains unchanged, although he won't say whether he supports making Canadians pay it on consumer items like gasoline. Singh rises during question period in Ottawa, Monday, April 15, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

OTTAWA — The federal leader of the New Democrats spent Monday insisting his party's position on carbon pricing remains unchanged.

But Jagmeet Singh refused to say explicitly whether he supports the consumer levy, and Canadians having to pay it on everyday items like gasoline.

"Our position is not changed — at all," he told reporters. 

"We absolutely support a price on pollution. We've always supported it." 

Singh faced reporters for the first time since a speech last week at the annual Progress Summit, where he created confusion about the NDP position on the federal consumer levy on fuel. 

In the address, Singh sang the praises of "affordable, low-carbon options" and vowed to "not punish people" who can't change how they heat their homes or get to work.

He later said the New Democrats would be putting forward a vision to tackle climate change that would emphasize initiatives with the most impact, such as methane regulations and a carbon price on industrial emitters. 

"Make those even stricter, make those even stronger, look at other ways for us to really take on big polluters," Singh told reporters last Thursday. 

"We don't want working people to feel like they're shouldering the burden. That's not fair. And frankly, not a New Democrat solution to the problem."

His comments followed those of NDP environment critic Laurel Collins, who said carbon pricing was not the "be-all, end-all" of climate action as she explained the NDP's decision to vote alongside Conservatives for a parliamentary motion critical of the Liberal policy.

The NDP has long championed carbon pricing and inked it into its 2019 campaign.  

The apparent shift in tone even seemed to flummox Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who last week admitted he doesn't understand the NDP's position.

Trudeau noted that Singh is facing "political pressure" from conservative premiers and Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who want to scrap the policy. 

Poilievre has indeed been travelling the country, including to NDP strongholds across British Columbia and northern Ontario, to rally supporters around his "axe the tax" message.

Public opinion polls show both the NDP and Liberals are bleeding support to the Conservatives as Poilievre champions affordability as his main issue, painting the supply-and-confidence agreement they entered into in March 2022 as a "costly coalition." 

The NDP says the deal has delivered Canadians wins on pharmacare and dental care, although it has been a struggle for that to sink in. 

While the Tory leader blames the consumer carbon price for adding to Canadians' anxieties about affordability, both the Liberals and NDP accuse him of having no plan to tackle climate change. 

Following Singh's speech last week, the NDP released a statement insisting it supports the "consumer carbon price." 

But when asked Monday to clarify whether he maintains that position himself, Singh would only say the party's voting record makes clear that it supports "a price on pollution," not specifying whether that includes a levy paid by consumers despite multiple questions to that effect. 

"We absolutely support a price on pollution. We have not changed our position on that," he said. 

"We need to make sure we fight the climate crisis with everything we have, but the Liberals are eroding that trust by not supporting working-class people," Singh added. 

He accused the Liberal government of continuing to provide subsides to oil and gas companies without providing supports to working-class families. 

Singh had earlier chided Trudeau's move to exempt home heating oil from the carbon price for three years, calling it a divisive decision. 

Nearly one in three households in Atlantic Canada relies on home heating oil, and the carve-out to the government's signature climate policy came after Liberal MPs in the region raised concerns about the rising cost of living. 

Trudeau and Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault have ruled out making any further exceptions.

That's despite demands from Western premiers, like Saskatchewan's Scott Moe, who say households that use natural gas should get the same break.

Moe is among a majority of provincial leaders, including lone Liberal Premier Andrew Furey of Newfoundland and Labrador, who are asking Trudeau to convene a meeting to discuss alternatives to the consumer carbon price. 

Trudeau has said provinces were on board when the government decided to move ahead with carbon pricing years ago. 

Today's premiers are too busy complaining and not coming up with their own plans to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, the prime minister has charged.

A Conservative motion calling on Trudeau to sit down with premiers for a televised meeting passed in the House of Commons last week with support from the NDP and the Bloc Québécois.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 15, 2024. 

Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press

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