The Globe has a good article today saying basically what I said yesterday about the BC election demonstrating that you can implement a price for carbon and not lose the next election. What scares me now is an Ignatieff quote from that article.
Mr. Dion's defeat on the issue so unnerved the Liberals that Michael Ignatieff, who embraced a carbon tax as a leadership contender in 2006, later shied away from it.
"We took the carbon tax to the public and the public didn't think it was such a good idea," he said earlier this year. "I'm trying to get myself elected here and if the public, after mature consideration, think that's the dumbest thing they've ever heard then I've got to listen."
This is where I think he is very wrong. Just because the people you talk to say it’s a bad idea doesn’t mean you should give up. If anything, it just means that you have to educate them about why it’s a good idea. This is what Obama at least seems to be trying to do in the US, and I would certainly like a government in Canada able to do that as well. Dion couldn’t do it because he couldn’t speak English. Ignatieff is a far more persuasive speaker, and I have faith that if he put his mind to it, he will be able to sell Canadians outside Alberta and Saskatchewan on the merits of Carbon pricing. If he can’t sell it to Alberta and Saskatchewan, no great loss there, it’s not like the Liberals would be winning many seats in those provinces anyway. If it gives him more support in BC and Quebec, it seems like a good idea to me.
On the bright side, we will basically have to accept whatever the American’s decide on continental climate policy, so even if we do nothing now, we will only be putting ourselves at a minor disadvantage in the future. Thankfully we emit such low levels of greenhouse gasses in the grand scheme of things, so our absolute climate impact is low, and our inaction only harms our future economic interests and much less so the planet.
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