PM says he doesn't 'understand' NDP's climate stance as Singh appears to shift on carbon tax
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he sympathizes with NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh but no longer understands his party's position on climate change after Singh appeared to waver on his support for the consumer carbon tax.
«I feel for the NDP and for Jagmeet. This is a hard moment. There are political headwinds,» Trudeau told reporters Friday at a press conference in Vaughan, Ont.
«There's a lot of political pressure. I'm certainly feeling it, everyone should be feeling it, by folks out there who are worried about affordability, who are worried about climate change.»
Speaking at the Broadbent Institute's annual policy conference in Ottawa on Thursday, Singh said his party will put forward a climate policy that won't divide Canadians and accused Trudeau of using the climate crisis as a political wedge.
«It can't be done by letting working families bear the cost of climate change while big polluters make bigger and bigger profits,» said Singh. «We all lose if we make Canadians choose between an affordable life and fighting the climate crisis.»
After the speech, Singh told reporters he doesn't want the burden of fighting climate change to fall on working people — but he wouldn't say whether that means he wants to get rid of the consumer carbon tax.
In a statement issued to CBC News, Singh said the NDP has not changed its position on the consumer carbon price.
«What we have done is commit to building a climate plan to make big polluters pay, bring down costs for Canadians, meet our emissions targets and unify people in taking on the climate crisis. Despite being in power for nine years, the Liberal government has failed to do this,» wrote Singh.
The prime minister suggested Friday morning that Conservative arguments against the