Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley is pro carbon tax

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Her claims to be the affordability superhero don’t ring true

Kris SimsNowadays, with many Albertans struggling to fill their fuel tanks and grocery carts, NDP leader Rachel Notley is singing from the hymnbook of affordability.

But her lyrics need a fact-check.

The leader of the NDP can’t claim to be the affordability superhero while she’s hanging the kryptonite of a carbon tax around Albertans’ necks.

Notley is a fan of the carbon tax. She even surprised Albertans with her own in 2015 and then campaigned on it in 2019.

Alberta families will be about $670 poorer this year because of the federal carbon tax, even with rebates factored in, according to data from the Parliamentary Budget Office.

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That carbon tax punishment is going to get much worse in the next eight years.

Albertans are currently saddled with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s federal carbon tax. Federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh supports the carbon tax, and he wants to jack it up.

Notley is in lockstep with her party’s federal leader.

Remember, the Alberta NDP is a section of the federal NDP. That’s how the New Democratic Party functions. The NDP is in favour of a carbon tax.

The carbon tax is currently $50 per tonne and the Trudeau-Singh government is going to triple it over the next eight years.

The carbon tax hits every form of petroleum-based fuel. It adds 11 cents per litre to the cost of gasoline and 13 cents per litre of diesel. That means driving to work and hauling our supplies, including groceries, is more expensive because of this punishing tax.

Heating our homes is punishable by a carbon tax, too. It costs an extra 9.8 cents per cubic metre of natural gas, 7.7 cents per litre of propane and 15.9 cents per litre of furnace oil.

An Alberta family sent the CTF their natural gas bill for a winter month. They used 850 cubic metres. The carbon tax for that amount is $83. While that’s a larger house and a larger bill, it was not the biggest bill sent in.

Within the next eight years, the Trudeau-Singh carbon tax on that family’s winter heat for just one month will be $280.

Remember the truckers paying the carbon tax to haul supplies? By 2030, diesel will cost an extra 55 cents per litre, costing $500 extra to fill a big rig. Moms filling their minivans will have to hand over about $36 extra.

But we don’t have to wait that long for the pain to intensify. The Trudeau-Singh carbon tax will jump up to $65 per tonne next year, and the government is creating a second carbon tax that will add about 10 cents more per litre. The second carbon tax is a government fuel regulation that makes gasoline and diesel cost more.

When carbon taxes are cranked up on gasoline, diesel, and home heating, everything that depends on those fuels is more expensive. That’s partly why groceries are more expensive and why record numbers of Alberta families are relying on food banks.

This connection between higher taxes on energy and the higher cost of essentials must be understood.

Notley has signalled that her NDP team won’t waiver in its support for the carbon tax. Even when the price at the pump was at a 10-year-high this past June, the NDP refused to join the Alberta government’s calls for Ottawa to suspend fuel taxes and carbon taxes.

Premier Danielle Smith’s recent move to entirely suspend the 13-cent-per-litre provincial fuel tax on gasoline and diesel, saving people about $15 every time they fill their pickup truck, will provide some relief.

If politicians want to get serious about affordability for Albertans, all of them should call for carbon taxes to be scrapped entirely.

Kris Sims is the Alberta Director for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

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The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.

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By Kris Sims

Kris Sims worked in radio in the Comox Valley before moving to Ottawa to work as a legislative assistant on Parliament Hill. She then joined Ottawa News Talk Radio 580 CFRA as a reporter and anchor, eventually becoming a journalist for the CTV parliamentary bureau. Kris was a founding reporter for Sun News Network and covered issues of big government, personal liberty and the rights of small-town and rural Canadians until SNN was shut down. She then worked as the director of communications for Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O’Toole, and as the senior producer for Evan Solomon at CFRA Radio. With deep family roots in Alberta’s rodeo country, she is proud to fight for the rights of all taxpayers.

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