6 Responded To This Post

11970. Bailey said on January 8, 2008 at 10:28 am

David McLaughlin is the President and CEO of the Roundtable.  And here’s his bio:

http://www.nrtee-trnee.ca/eng/overview/staff/McLaughlin-David-eng.htm 

Lots of links to the Conservative Party there, even a stint as Chief of Staff to Jim Flaherty for almost a year and a half. 

11971. ALW said on January 8, 2008 at 10:29 am

This is eminently fair criticism.  I’m curious as to whether you think Dion should have rejected the idea also? I am guessing not.

11972. Scott Tribe said on January 8, 2008 at 10:42 am

ALW:

The point of this post, as you should be well aware, was what sillyness Baird was engaging in with his dumb statements.. not what plans I support.

That said: I’d support a carbon tax, going hand-in-hand with a cap-and-trade system, such as what Dion outlined in his Carbon Budget Plan.

11977. Chris Tindal said on January 8, 2008 at 5:20 pm

Scott, just to be clear (though I think this is what you meant), Dion’s plan only supports the cap and trade side, not a carbon tax. Regrettably, the obvious and necessary combination of the two is only supported by the Green Party.

11981. ALW said on January 8, 2008 at 8:33 pm

Chris - you’re right.  And I give the Green Party full marks for proposing it.  At the same time, the <i>realpolitik</i> of the matter is that many Canadians are fairweather environmentalists: they want a better environment, but they want someone else to pay for it.  As such, these proposals are political non-starters: which is why both Harper and Dion distance themselves from any policies that would actually see Canadians face serious cost impositions.

The more serious question - and a non-partisan one, at that - should really be: how do we convince Canadians that it’s worth paying the cost of reducing our emissions now.  It’s a classic problem, really: how to convince people short term pain means long term gain.  And as anyone around politics will tell you: instant and tangible benefits almost always come out on top. 

11995. Wayne said on January 9, 2008 at 1:12 pm

People at the local coffee shop and the lunch crowd were furious at the idea of a carbon tax.

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