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When the NDP wants to ‘axe the tax,’ where can a climate voter turn?

David Eby and Jagmeet Singh (pictured above) are trashing the single tax policy that, through its enforced neutrality, has actually put more money back in the hands of low-income voters. Photo by Obert Madondo/Flickr (cc BY-NC-SA 2.0)

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What do you do when the only political party that might have slowed our headlong rush to climate catastrophe completely caves on the single issue that most threatens human habitability on planet Earth?

I live on the fringe. Okay, not true. I live in a smallish condo in a prosperous Vancouver neighbourhood, the kind of place where a socially progressive politician might usually attract friendly smiles, but very few votes.

I’m also a liberal — though, emphatically, not a Liberal. Federally, that party is so clearly invested in the ego of its leader that it has abandoned even its foundational dedication to political opportunism. 

And in British Columbia (B.C.), the Liberal brand has disappeared altogether. By ‘liberal,’ I mean someone who learned in high school (thank you history teacher Doug Steinson) to be deeply distrustful of extremists.

Finally, I am a climate-change voter. I accept the scientific consensus that human-caused global warming presents an existential crisis that we should be addressing with the haste and vigor appropriate to an issue that is, unequivocally, EXISTENTIAL!

So, imagine my delight when the savvy and resourceful Vancouver city councillor Christine Boyle announced her intention to contest the coming B.C. election as a New Democratic Party candidate in my riding (Vancouver-Little Mountain). In past elections, I have often found myself placing my ‘X’ beside the Green Party candidate. In our flawed first-past-the-post system, I was reduced to expressing an environmentally-concerned opinion, rather than casting a ‘strategic’ vote that had no potential to shift the balance. But Boyle’s a star. Her candidacy tempted me to believe there might be a chance to nudge this riding away from the reactionaries.

Then, with my finger hovering over the volunteer button, B.C. Premier David Eby and national NDP leader Jagmeet Singh stepped up to trash the carbon tax, so widely regarded among economists, policy wonks — and pretty much anyone who’s done the reading — as the most effective climate mitigation measure that any government could implement. 

In doing so, Eby and Singh indicate, to me at least, that their party is in thrall not to science, idealism or even decent economic theory, but to the shallow populism of Conservative leaders Pierre Poilievre (federally), John Rustad (provincially) and Donald Trump (notionally). Seeing the success that those demagogues are having while playing to their base, the B.C. and national NDP leaders have obviously decided to adopt the same strategy. Weirdly, though, they also decided to play not to their own base, but to Poilievre and Rustad’s — freely abandoning NDP supporters, as well as anyone else who hoped to make headway on addressing climate change.

I get it. And I really, really don’t get it. I understand that by misrepresenting the impact of the federal and provincial carbon taxes, Poilievre and Rustad have made the issue politically radioactive. And through their incompetence and cynicism in alternatively not defending or outright damaging the federal tax, the Liberals have added a dangerous trigger to the now-fissionable material. Eby and Singh have seen polls: this policy is a political loser.

@Dave_Eby and @theJagmeetSingh are trashing the single tax policy that, through its enforced neutrality, has actually put more money back in the hands of low-income voters, writes @RLittlemore #bcpoli #cdnpoli

But really, what is the strategic benefit of endorsing your political opponents’ most effective — and disingenuous — position? Do New Democrats seriously believe that ‘axe the tax’ voters are now going to rush away from the dissembling Poilievre and the outright climate-change-denying Rustad? (And, c’mon: anyone who says he believes in climate change, but doubts that it’s a problem, is absolutely in denial.) Nope. Low-information, anti-tax voters will still pick the obvious choice and, David, Jagmeet: it’s not you!

Even more ridiculously, Eby and Singh say they are going to shift to policies that make big polluters pay, taking the burden off the working class. And they’re going to do it by trashing the single tax policy that, through its enforced neutrality, has actually put more money back in the hands of low-income voters. Yet, the B.C. NDP has already given the liquified natural gas industry tax breaks that likely dwarf the entirety of its carbon tax repayments. We know that industry is expert at dodging almost every other measure. That’s why economists love the simple, unavoidable carbon tax: it works. Or it will until after the next election.

I’m still going to vote. I still want to hope. And I’m happy that Boyle will make a great — and still available — candidate for mayor in the 2026 Vancouver municipal election. But, an immodest prediction: we all will live to rue the day that the NDP chose panic over policy, joined Poilievre and Rustad, and drove a nail into the coffin of the best climate policy on the continent.

Richard Littlemore is a freelance journalist, speechwriter, ghostwriter and consultant, with clients currently concentrated in the academic, business and property development sectors. 

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