麻豆影视

Skip to main content

'Liberals fight for every seat that we get,' Alberta minister says following backlash to Hutchings' carbon policy comments

Share

In the wake of a cabinet minister鈥檚 controversial claim that people in the Prairies should elect more Liberals if they want to secure carve-outs in federal carbon policy, Employment Minister and Alberta MP Randy Boissonnault insists that 鈥淟iberals fight for every seat that (they) get.鈥

Rural Economic Development Minister Gudie Hutchings received significant backlash after she said on CTV鈥檚 Question Period last Sunday that 鈥淎tlantic Caucus was vocal with what they've heard from their constituents, and perhaps they need to elect more Liberals in the Prairies so that we can have that conversation as well.鈥

Just days prior, the federal government announced changes to its marquee climate policy, the carbon price, namely by granting a three-year pause on the federal fuel charge on home heating oil.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also announced the federal government would be doubling the carbon rebate for rural households and expanding incentives for some Canadians to move to a heat pump.

However, the change primarily impacts and benefits Atlantic Canadians, where much larger percentages of households use heating oil.

Hutchings鈥 comments last week dominated debate in the House of Commons and spurred calls from opposition parties for the federal government to extend the carbon tax break to all forms of home heating.

Trudeau also said this week there would 鈥渁bsolutely not be any other carve-outs or suspensions of the price on pollution.鈥

Boissonnault 鈥 who is one of just two Liberal MPs, and the sole cabinet minister, in Alberta 鈥 told CTV鈥檚 Question Period host Vassy Kapelos in an interview airing Sunday that Canada is 鈥渂uilt on compromises and carve-outs, regardless of who you vote for.鈥

鈥淚 think you can raise that with Minister Hutchings,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat I can say is that the work that I've done in this seat as minister and as MP, and along with George Chahal out of Calgary, is deliver billions of dollars for Albertans.鈥

Boissonnault cited Alberta鈥檚 phase-out of coal as an example of the federal and provincial governments working together to reduce emissions.

鈥淎nd guess what? The country helped us do that,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat didn't help Ontario and it didn't help Quebec. That was a regional carve-out to make sure that we could get Alberta off of coal.鈥

He added the recently announced carve-out in the carbon price for households using heating oil will benefit people across the country, regardless of whether there is a larger percentage of people to whom it would apply in Atlantic Canada.

鈥淟iberals fight for every seat that we get, and we do that work with our colleagues across the country,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd what we have here is a program that's going to help Albertans, Ontarians, folks in Atlantic Canada, switch from home heating oil 鈥 which is two-to-four times more expensive, and twice as polluting 鈥 to heat pumps.鈥

Boissonnault in his interview also discussed Alberta鈥檚 proposal to leave the Canada Pension Plan and whether Alberta should receive a carve-out of its own in the federal climate policy to push the deadline to achieve a net-zero electricity grid.

You can watch the full interview on CTV鈥檚 Question Period Sunday at 11 a.m. ET.

With files from CTVNews.ca鈥檚 Senior Digital Parliamentary Reporter Rachel Aiello and CTV鈥檚 Question Period Senior Producer Stephanie Ha

IN DEPTH

Opinion

opinion

opinion Don Martin: How a beer break may have doomed the carbon tax hike

When the Liberal government chopped a planned beer excise tax hike to two per cent from 4.5 per cent and froze future increases until after the next election, says political columnist Don Martin, it almost guaranteed a similar carbon tax move in the offing.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

A unique form of clouds made an appearance over the skies of Ottawa on Sunday evening.

Weeneebayko Area Health Authority and the Government of Ontario have awarded a $1.8 billion fixed-price contract to design, build and finance a new Far North hospital.

A 54-year-old inmate at the Toronto South Detention Centre has been charged in connection with a deadly jail beating late last week that claimed the life of a 69-year-old prisoner.

Local Spotlight

Bernie Hicks, known as the 鈥楤atman of Amherst,鈥 always wanted to sit in a Batmobile until a kind stranger made it happen.

Bubi鈥檚 Awesome Eats, located on University Ave West took to social media to announce the closure on Friday.

Weeneebayko Area Health Authority and the Government of Ontario have awarded a $1.8 billion fixed-price contract to design, build and finance a new Far North hospital.

Some Manitobans are cleaning up Sunday morning, after intense winds barreled through southern parts of the province Saturday.

Avry Wortman, 13, scored two touchdowns on Sunday during her team's win in the under 14 Greater Moncton Football Association.

A gargantuan gourd 鈥 affectionately named 鈥極rangina鈥 by the urban gardeners who grew it in the front yard of their Vancouver home 鈥 earned the massive honour of being named B.C.鈥檚 heaviest giant pumpkin Saturday.

Chantal Kreviazuk is set to return to Winnipeg to mark a major milestone in her illustrious musical career.

From the beaches of Cannes to the bustling streets of New York City, a new film by a trio of Manitoba directors has toured the international film festival circuit to much pomp and circumstance.

A husband and wife have been on the road trip of a lifetime and have decided to stop in Saskatchewan for the winter.

Stay Connected