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“The greatest happiness,” Genghis Khan famously said, “is to scatter your enemy, to drive him before you, to see his cities reduced to ashes, [and] to see those who love him shrouded in tears.” That’s something Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre must be feeling deeply right now. With a seemingly insurmountable lead in the polls and the Liberal government collapsing before his very eyes, he’s on the verge of getting everything he’s ever wanted in politics — and then some.
But there’s another piece of Khan’s wisdom that Poilievre may be about to learn. "Conquering the world on horseback is easy,” he said. “It is dismounting and governing that is hard." That’s especially true when you’ve spent the last two years, as Poilievre has, raising the expectations of your closest supporters. It’s one thing to promise that you’ll axe the tax, fix the budget, build the homes and stop the crime. It’s quite another to actually do it.
Poilievre’s first act as prime minister will likely be, as he’s promised thousands of times by now, to “axe the tax.” But eliminating the carbon tax and rebate won’t magically make people’s groceries cheaper, if only because it didn’t cause them to go up in the first place. As a new paper by University of Calgary economists Trevor Tombe and Jennifer Winter makes clear, the carbon tax has had a negligible impact on inflation. “Contrary to common perceptions,” they write, “we show that these policies (and all other indirect taxes embedded within items consumers purchase) contributed only about a 0.5 per cent overall increase in consumer prices since 2019 — accounting for a small fraction of the more than 19 per cent increase in such prices over that period.”
Instead, as the most recent iteration of Canada’s Food Price Report makes clear, the bigger drivers of rising food prices in 2025 are expected to be climate change (hello, olive oil prices!) and the prospect of a trade war between Canada and the United States. In a particularly cruel irony, the households most negatively impacted by rising food prices will also lose the most from the elimination of the carbon tax and rebate. This is the risk in pretending, as Poilievre has for years now, that the carbon tax is the root cause of all Canada’s problems. When those problems persist or even worsen after the carbon tax has been eliminated, people will naturally go looking for a different cause — and perhaps start considering Poilievre for the role of whipping boy.
The same holds true for Poilievre’s pledge to “build the homes,” a promise that has helped him attract more support from younger voters than any Conservative in his lifetime. Poilievre correctly identified the role that so-called “gatekeepers” at the local level were playing in obstructing the development of new housing supply, and the impact that was having on rents and home prices.
What he has missed — or, at least, declines to talk about — is the disproportionate role conservative-leaning politicians are playing in that. In Calgary, for example, almost all of the political resistance to the city’s recent blanket up-zoning has come from either conservative-leaning councilors or members of Poilievre’s own Conservative caucus like Calgary Centre MP Greg McLean. In Ontario, Doug Ford’s government has been the biggest enemy of the pro-housing policies espoused by Poilievre. At some point, and probably pretty soon, he’s going to have to pick a side here.
And then there’s the oil and gas industry, where Poilievre is promising to unleash a flood of new investment in pipelines, LNG terminals, and other energy infrastructure. He’ll repeal Bill C-69, which clarified (and strengthened) the environmental review process for major projects, and Bill-48, which banned tankers off the north coast of British Columbia. And then he and his allies in Alberta will have to watch as they lose their single greatest asset in their crusade to crush climate policy: the ability to blame Justin Trudeau.
For almost a decade now, they’ve pretended that global trends that drove down investment in the U.S. oil and gas industry, to almost the same extent as in Canada, are entirely the doing of the Liberal government. Now, they’ll be forced to contend with reality. Demand for oil and gas will peak within the next decade while the cost of renewable energy and electric vehicles will keep getting cheaper. And while blaming Trudeau will still be a popular sport in Alberta long after Poilievre leaves office — some pundits here still can’t let Pierre go, after all — it won’t work nearly as well outside the province.
On top of all that, Poilievre will also have to contend with an American president who’s openly hostile to Canada’s economic interests. According to Politico, incoming vice president JD Vance reportedly said, in a confused reference to Poilievre, “it’s not entirely clear it’s better for us to have Mitt Romney with a French accent as prime minister.” So much for Vance’s friend and CPC MP Jamil Jivani playing a moderating influence on the new administration.
None of this will change the outcome of the next federal election, or the inevitability of a Conservative majority government. But the seeds of future discontent with it are already being sown by Poilievre himself, and they will almost certainly take root in his own political fields.
Comments
It's remarkable and disheartening that so many Canadians are being duped by Poilievre's simplistic falsehoods.
Is there any way we can easily share something like that on Social Media? I know Facebook laws makes things complicated, but this is the sort of message that should be sent, rather than just sticking to shell ourselves in the corner and labeling everyone else as narrow minded. As if no one ever goes on the named site because they can't take five minutes to tap in the google engine the title of the article followed by the writer's site.
Actually, no. It is not surprising or remarkable at all. It's all in Marketing 101. It has been proved in spades by all the recent research on Covid conspiracies too. People will latch on to simple explanations that offer solutions that are promised to work rather than wrestle with the same problem via complex solutions that the proposers honestly admit will probably work.
Poilievre and his political managers have understood this principle and put it to work.
Our Banana Republic has proven to the world how Canada is controlled by a 'FEMENIST'' whose agenda is akin to Biden who shamefully pardoned his son and IMO this part of their Constitution was not meant for personal family as well as the right to bear arms also was meant for GOV's rebelling the rights of the people however with our ancient Canadian form of control that is kept strictly for 'TRADITION',, Time for Canada to modern itself to this wicked world we've developed and elect mature people with logic rather than emotion and sign up with AMERICA as Trump suggested,, our only hope for a good life and a sane way to live.
Never in a million years will Canadians want to be swallowed up by the USA. Especially a country that elects a convicted felon as president. The Orange Sphincter should be in prison for his criminal acts. To think that is a solution to Canada's issues, you must be high on something. In time, you will see Pierre the snake oil salesman will be far worse than the Liberals.
There is nothing sane about joining a country lead by a a guy with 34 felony convictions convictions. Nothing.
Please, feel free to move.
Huh? "FEMENIST?!" Before you capitalize a word you should probably check the spelling, but I guess you're one of the trolls that only show up on here occasionally, fortunately, which is one of the reasons we all subscribe.
The time for ANY arguing for non-partisan inclusiveness and/or "differing opinions" has officially ended now; you guys have HAD your heyday. Every single opinion or political position that has EVER been put forward, including the "woke" BS, has now been fully exposed for the willful disinformation it is.
One dead easy progressive stance should now be to point out not only the blatant and unprecedentedly relentless (what social media was MADE for) manipulation of conservative "followers" that has taken place by con "leaders" (do you suppose maybe that's WHY conservatives are called that now?), but even worse than that-- the basic DISRESPECT shown that naturally arises from deliberately LYING to anyone.
Of course the MAGA cult types are beyond reach, but there has got to be quite a few guys just riding the wave for "fun"......
So is this sarcasm? Dash it, I can never tell any more.
Pierre is nothing short of a snake oil salesman and the right-wing supporters need to wake up and see they are being dupped by a con artist. Pee Pee can make all the promises in the world, but the voters who supported him, will not see their life changed as they think. Pierre can't stop the impacts climate change has on prices, nor magically build more affordable homes which are beyond federal control.
Unfortunately most of his voters will be fed a mountain of BS about whose fault it is, and the truth will never see the light of day, until a government somewhere takes on the social media platforms that are all too happy to conspire with right wing nut jobs.
Correct