Today the Vancouver Sun published an opinion piece I wrote in advance of the next provincial election. I am reproducing the text of this piece here so I am able to share it on my Facebook Page (which doesn’t allow news stories from Canadian Media to be published).
The B.C. NDP’s sudden abandonment of the consumer carbon tax is a disappointing and cynical ploy announced just days after the federal NDP did the same.
Rather than taking this golden opportunity to follow the lead of Alberta NDP’s Naheed Nenshi in calling for the separation of the provincial NDP from Jagmeet Singh’s party, David Eby piled on populist rhetoric with no alternative to offer in its place.
When leadership is so desperately needed on the most important environmental issue of our time, David Eby put politics ahead of principle. This is the same type of ambiguity in climate change policymaking that ultimately inspired me to run for office in 2013.
Simply put, the B.C. NDP botched the implementation of carbon pricing by completely omitting B.C.’s middle class from receiving the money other Canadians across the country enjoy.
Take, for example, Alberta, where under Danielle Smith’s United Conservative government, households of four are entitled to $1,800 per year from the Canada Carbon Rebate.
If we ignore the noise from the many falsehoods being spread about the federal carbon tax, the quarterly cheques that Canadians in eight other provinces collect add up to more in their pockets than they pay in overall costs.
By contrast, that same family of four in British Columbia receives nothing if their household income exceeds $107,688 and only $1,008 if it is below $57,288.
This is a deliberate decision that the B.C. NDP government has implemented. They chose who would be eligible for rebates, and the results equate to most British Columbians being left high and dry on financial relief.
Herein lies the egregious political error that caused Eby to capitulate on the eve of the election.
Over the coming fiscal year, the government will collect just over $2.5 billion in carbon tax revenues. Of that total, only $1 billion, or about 40 per cent, is returned to B.C. residents. This is a far cry from the revenue-neutral carbon tax introduced by Gordon Campbell in 2008, which set a standard for climate action that didn’t burden the pocketbooks of British Columbians.
Alas, the David Eby approach has allowed the B.C. Conservatives under John Rustad to politically emerge by speaking to the struggles B.C. residents face under what has become a tone-deaf government.
People were shocked when I publicly praised Rustad. But after Eby’s carbon tax retreat, nobody should have been.
While the B.C. Conservative leader and I have policy differences on climate action public policy, there is one quality I see in Rustad that I value above all else in public office holders: authenticity.
Democracy works when voters can make decisions based on accurate information. If nothing else, Rustad has been consistent on his plans to scrap the carbon tax, which is more than can be said for David Eby, who is tearing up his historical positions on climate action in a desperate bid for re-election.
This brings forth a much larger point that embodies my inclination to use pragmatism and collaboration when designing and implementing climate action plans. The NDP’s insistence on falsely labelling their opponents as climate deniers is not only done in bad faith, but also represents an approach to governance that demonstrates a devotion to playing politics rather than lowering carbon emissions.
Moreover, it was the B.C. NDP who approved and generously subsidized LNG Canada, the biggest source of greenhouse gas emissions in B.C.’s history.
No one has a monopoly on determining the best path forward for a climate action agenda and I sincerely hope David Eby’s brand of hegemonic politics can be put aside during the election campaign.
This is shaping up to be the most important election in our province’s history, and British Columbians deserve better than being manipulated into how they cast their ballots.
3 Comments
Dr. Weaver,
Thanks for your service both as a scientist/professor and as an MLA. I was thrilled when you came on the political scene since I believe scientists are underrepresented in our politics. I was happy to vote for my local Green candidate after what I felt was your strong performance in the 2017 leader’s debate.
That said, I’m quite skeptical of your claim that Rustad is an authentic actor. You said in a prior piece that your views and his views regarding climate change are “…not as wide as some might imagine.” [1] However, in an interview after your editorial, Rustad said “It’s a sad reality, but how is it that we’ve convinced carbon-based beings that carbon is a problem?” [2] We know this trite talking point is straight from the denialist playbook. In July he told a group that he regrets getting what he called the “so-called [COVID] vaccine” since he felt they were about “shaping opinion and control of the population” rather than public health [3]. When pressed on this quite recently, his story changed to side effects rather than spooky conspiracies of control [4]. I just ate dinner, so I won’t go into his comments about eating bugs.
I believe the upshot here is that there are at least two Rustads. The Rustad you talk to, or the Rustad on the campaign trail is a curated and restrained Rustad designed to be palpable to people who believe in making decisions based on evidence and who aren’t conspiracy theorists. However, when Rustad is in his “natural habitat” so to speak (i.e. among other denialists or conspiracy theorists), the mask slips and the nonsense comes out. Not exactly what I would call authentic behaviour.
[1] https://www.andrewjweaver.ca/2024/07/10/david-eby-lost-plot-takes-govern/
[2] https://www.desmog.com/2024/09/05/climate-denier-john-rustad-is-now-a-major-player-in-bcs-october-election/
[3] https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/rustad-covid-19-vaccine-1.7331713
[4] https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/rustad-regrets-covid-vax-confirmed-1.7333038
Would you please provide a source(s) for the numbers provided in your article. Thank you.
Thank you for asking:
BC: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/taxes/income-taxes/personal/credits/climate-action
Alberta: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/child-family-benefits/canada-carbon-rebate/how-much.html