Day ten, and things felt a bit more on track today now that the Paul Chiang situation didn’t loom over everything. Mark Carney was in Winnipeg, and re-announced his party’s affordability measures, such as the cancellation of the consumer carbon levy (though I’m not sure how losing the rebates after this quarter will help most households with affordability), his tax cut plan (which disproportionately helps the wealthy), and their various home building pledges along with the previously announced expansion of dental care this summer. That said, he also said expanding pharmacare likely wasn’t going to be a priority (but remember that pharmacare done in the dumbest way possible because the NDP insisted, so maybe it’ll give it time to negotiate a better system? But only if the premiers actually want to play ball, mind you, and they were reluctant beforehand. Carney is back in Ottawa today for “meetings” in advance of the tariff announcement this afternoon.
Responding to a reporter's question in Winnipeg, Mark Carney confirms that a reelected Liberal government would not repeal Bill C-69, the environmental impact assessment act, which has been dubbed by its critics as the “no more pipelines act."
#cdnpoli #elxn2025 pic.twitter.com/3356eySCTk— CPAC (@CPAC_TV) April 1, 2025
Pierre Poilievre was in Petty Harbour, Newfoundland and Labrador, and announced that he was going to cave to five demands from the oil industry, including repealing the Impact Assessment Act, scrap the emissions cap, the industrial carbon price, guarantee “six-month approvals” for projects (and good luck with that), and increase Indigenous loan guarantees for resource projects. Of course, the justifications he keeps pointing to are things that predated Trudeau and the IAA, and there are a tonne of approved projects on the books that aren’t moving ahead for market-based reasons. He’s selling a fiction about the need for more oil and gas projects which the market has not moved on, and is convinced this is the way to fight Trump. It’s baffling. Poilievre also insisted that the Liberals were going to bring the consumer carbon levy back once the election is over, just like Andrew Scheer and Erin O’Toole also insisted that the Liberals were going to tax the capital gains on your home. He later made an announcement in PEI about removing the automatic escalator on beer, wine and spirits, which…is a fraction of a cent every year. Honest to Dionysus… Poilievre will be in Toronto this morning, and heads to Kingston for the evening.
“I voted against C-69. I have always been against C-69. I’ve said I will repeal C-69, the ‘no-new-pipelines’ Liberal law within 60 days of becoming prime minister,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said at a St. John’s press conference earlier today. #cdnpoli #elxn2025 pic.twitter.com/TvPiYGMcMx
— CPAC (@CPAC_TV) April 1, 2025
None of these projects were reviewed under the legislation contained in Bill c-69. Most were reviewed under CEAA 2012 ex MVP (CEAA 1992) and (where applicable) the same vintage of the NEB Act. Some were cancelled before Trudeau was elected. Some were DOA years before that. https://t.co/dzIH5lkVGs
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 1, 2025
Saguenay? Blocked by the Quebec Government. Energy East? TC Energy and the Government of Alberta along with oil shippers bet on a revived KXL and subsequently on TMX. Those BC LNG terminals? Turns out a lot were cancelled in 2016-17 Wonder why? Did Trudeau do this? pic.twitter.com/GDDNQ9Ccdt
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 1, 2025
Shell walked away from a half-built Carmon Creek in 2015, before the federal election, and had basically stopped construction a year earlier when prices collapsed. It was expensive and emissions-intensive and Shell was looking to re-orient its portfolio away from those things.
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 1, 2025
I mean, hell, if you're going to blame someone, there's probably more credibility to blaming me than blaming Trudeau. That's what Koch did (indirectly) for Muskwa https://t.co/B13rNKlfEd
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 1, 2025
Oh, but why is no one applying for a new pipeline? CER has seen the Mainline expanded, the TMX pipeline built (and running under capacity) and there is an outstanding permit for KXL. Any new line has to justify need beyond that.
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 2, 2025
Both the federal Liberals and the Conservatives before them have been all over the map on major energy projects. I am all-in on building a better process, but to do that, people have to be honest with themselves about what happened and would have happened under different rules.
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 2, 2025
Of course, an LNG project approved after 2015 looked…not great for a long time. pic.twitter.com/e2NIbuC3e1
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) April 2, 2025
Jagmeet Singh was in Edmonton, and promised changes to the Canada Health Act to ensure that American corporations can’t buy Canadian healthcare facilities, and to put stronger controls on provinces who allow cash-for-access services. He later headed to Winnipeg and met with Wab Kinew. Singh remains in Winnipeg today.
"You elect New Democrats, we're going to go to Ottawa and fight to make sure our health care system is stronger, that you can get the care you need faster," says NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh as he proposes measures to protect Canada's public health care system.
#cdnpoli #elxn2025 pic.twitter.com/wx0t4vRlgQ— CPAC (@CPAC_TV) April 1, 2025
In other campaign news, the Greens have qualified to be in the leaders’ debates, but Maxime Bernier and his vanity party have not (as it should be). Here is a comparison of the various carbon pricing (or not) policies as we now appear to be in a race to the bottom based on false premises. Here is an analysis of the various housing promises. And stories of frustration continue to leak out from the Conservative ranks.
Ukraine Dispatch
Russians claim to have captured a new village in eastern Donetsk region. President Zelenskyy is meeting with a small number of countries about contributing troops as part of the security guarantee in the event the conflict does end.
Russia's territorial gains in Ukraine drop to lowest level since June 2024, monitoring group says; some Russians celebrated Ukrainian drone strikes on Moscow, intercepted calls suggest; and more.https://t.co/Ua3bXENruL
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) April 1, 2025
Russian strike on Kherson energy facility causes blackout despite partial ceasefire, FM says.
Some 45,000 residents of Kherson were left without electricity after a morning Russian attack on one of the city's power facilities.https://t.co/myE4dC0DEx
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) April 1, 2025