Skip to main content

The perilous political calculus of Trudeau’s pipeline play

#516 of 2564 articles from the Special Report: Race Against Climate Change
Justin Trudeau, China, Operation Fox Hunt
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau file image from Canadian Press

Support strong Canadian climate journalism for 2025

Help us raise $150,000 by December 31. Can we count on your support?
Goal: $150k
$32k

If Prime Minister Trudeau and his Liberal party want any chance at winning the next election, they need to take a deep breath and really think through the politics of any decisions they make around major oil infrastructure projects like the Energy East pipeline and Kinder Morgan’s expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline.

If they're not careful, approving a new oil pipeline in Canada could harm them a lot more than they think it could help them.

There is of course the sound scientific and logical argument that approving either of these pipeline projects nullifies any actions the Trudeau government takes on the important issue of climate change. But unfortunately, politics, science and logic find themselves at odds these days for many government leaders, including Trudeau.

So if science and logic are not compelling enough, which is clearly the case given the Trudeau government's decision earlier this week to green light the Pacific Northwest liquid natural gas project, then let’s look at the politics.

The last election saw Trudeau and his Liberal party win a majority by holding the center of the political spectrum and then drawing in a reasonable number of both moderately left and right leaning Canadians. This is classic “big tent” politics and very nice place to be.

Problem is that it is hard to keep everyone happy in a big tent for any length of time. That’s why we are starting to see more and more pundits grumbling about the “end of the honeymoon period” between Trudeau and the Canadian public.

The big tent is starting to shrink, which is a big problem for Trudeau if he wants to see a second term.

Pipelines could be Trudeau and the Liberal party’s savior. But not in the way many people think.

Last month, new fundraising numbers provided a good indicator of the health of the major political parties in Canada. Surprisingly, despite the mess Stephen Harper left behind, the Conservative party continues to out-fundraise the Liberals. Many tens-of-thousands of Canadians clearly still support the Conservatives.

The NDP on the other hand, continue to struggle to find their mojo and their low fundraising numbers support that.

So on Trudeau’s right flank he has a strong Conservative party who with a new leader will pose a serious threat in the next election. On Trudeau’s left he sees the NDP in a much weaker position.

Back to pipelines.

We know that many more right-leaning voters support increased oil projects, while those Canadians with more left-leaning views (like myself) see pipelines as a threat to the long term viability of our planet and the human race.

The big strategic political question for Trudeau then is this: which side of the big tent is more likely to stay with Trudeau based on his government’s decisions on major pipeline projects like Energy East in Quebec and the Trans Mountain project in British Columbia?

The Conservatives remain strong as the opposition party, will soon have a fresh new leader and have tons of money in their political war chest. It is going to very hard for Trudeau to hold the right flank of his big tent come the next election with a strong Conservative party investing heavily in pulling moderate right-leaning voters back over to the dark side.

Chances are, even if Trudeau approves a new oil pipeline, it will not be enough to convince a lot of moderate-right supporters to stick with his Liberal party.

Compared to the Conservatives, the fundraising data says that the NDP will likely be a much weaker third contender in the next election and will have a lot more trouble drawing the moderate left out from under the Trudeau tent. That is, unless Trudeau gives the moderate-left a really big reason to leave, and I can't think of a bigger reason than approving one of the new pipelines that were such a major point of contention during the Harper years.

The irony in all this is that the Canadian government under the Harper Conservatives failed to get any new major oil pipelines built, despite a borderline obsessive focus. By approving a pipeline, Trudeau will be finishing what Harper started but runs the real risk of not reaping any of the political reward of continued support from the moderate-right.

The argument that by approving a pipeline Trudeau will hold on to moderate-right voter support is shaky at best. But what is almost a certainty (which are far and few between in politics), is that by approving either the Energy East or Trans Mountain pipeline projects almost guarantees that many moderate-left voters will flock back to the NDP and the Green party.

The most messed up part of all is that the likeliest outcome in the next election if Trudeau approves a pipeline will be a divided center-left in Canada split between the Liberals, the NDP and the Greens and a fresh new solid block on the right for the Conservatives. Canada will be right back where it started ten years ago with a split left and a solid right, thus assuring the Conservatives get back into power with far less than fifty-percent of the popular vote.

In other words, a new pipeline could turn out to be nothing but political gold for the Conservatives in the long run. All thanks to Trudeau.

This report was made possible thanks to reader subscriptions. Please subscribe today.

Comments