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'Baloney factory': Eby mocks Poilievre letter asking B.C. to join carbon price fight

A letter from Opposition Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to British Columbia Premier David Eby, asking him to help halt a federal carbon price increase, was dismissed by Eby as a "baloney factory" campaign tactic.
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A letter from Opposition Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to British Columbia Premier David Eby, asking him to help halt a federal carbon tax increase, has been dismissed by Eby as a "baloney factory" campaign tactic. Eby speaks during a news conference in Vancouver, B.C., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

TERRACE, BRITISH COLUMBIA — A letter from Opposition Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to British Columbia Premier David Eby, asking him to help halt a federal carbon price increase, was dismissed by Eby as a "baloney factory" campaign tactic.

Poilievre's letter sent Friday asked Eby to join seven other premiers in opposing the April 1 increase, saying the 23 per cent rise amounts to an extra 18 cents on a litre of fuel, and people in B.C. and Canadians can't afford it.

"I am writing, asking that you: do not administer the April 1 tax hike," said the one-page letter. "Join the seven other premiers demanding (Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau stop the hike."

Poilievre's letter said the carbon pricing system set up by Trudeau is an imposition on the provinces that requires them to accept an ever-increasing levy.

But Eby, speaking at an unrelated news conference in Terrace, said B.C. residents would end up with less money returned to them if the government accepted Poilievre's "campaign office and baloney factory" request.

"I don't live in the Pierre Poilievre campaign office and baloney factory," said Eby. "I live in B.C., am the premier, and decisions have consequences. The fact we face is that if we followed Mr. Poilievre's suggestion there would be less money returned to British Columbians after April 1 than there would be if the federal government administered this increase directly."

B.C. introduced North America's first broad-based price on carbon in 2008, and will administer the coming increase on behalf of the federal government.

Poilievre's letter said people in B.C. and across Canada are in need of relief and not tax increases.

"It makes no difference to the hard-working people of B.C. who administers the tax, they still pay it," said the Poilievre letter.

The premiers of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador have asked the federal government to drop the April 1 increase.

The scheduled increase appears to have sparked political tensions between Trudeau's federal Liberal government and the provincial Liberal government in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Trudeau accused Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey on Friday of "continuing to bow to political pressure" with his opposition to the anticipated carbon price increase.

"I think Canadians in Newfoundland and Labrador, and right across the country, expect their governments to do the right thing," Trudeau told reporters in Montreal, adding the carbon pricing program returns more money to households in rebates than what most people pay out.

Furey, Canada's only Liberal premier, has been battling against the charge on carbon for the past year.

He said people in rural areas cannot immediately access energy alternatives such as public transit and electric vehicles on top of facing the burdens of inflation.

The carbon price is set to rise to $80 per tonne, up from $65 per tonne.

— By Dirk Meissner in Victoria

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 15, 2024.

The Canadian Press