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Poll: Majority of Canadians want to halt plans for a national carbon tax’ – Fear ‘competitive disadvantage’ with U.S.

By Ryan Maloney – Senior Politics Editor, HuffPost Canada

More than half of Canadians want the federal government to halt plans for a national carbon tax if it means it places this country in a competitive disadvantage with the United States, a new poll suggests.

The numbers released by the Angus Reid Institute Wednesday also indicate that federal carbon pricing is more popular in theory than reality.

55 per cent say ‘hold off’

The Liberal government is imposing a national floor price on carbon pollution of $10 per tonne in 2018, rising to $50 per tonne in 2022. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned last year that the federal government would enforce those prices in any province or territorythat does not implement either a carbon tax or cap-and-trade system, but said all revenue would go back to those jurisdictions.

Conservatives and some premiers have argued any carbon levy will put Canadian businesses in a bind — arguments that only became louder after Donald Trump won the U.S. presidency. A climate change skeptic who has promised to slash corporate taxes and restrictions on the fossil fuel industry, Trump has already withdrawn the U.S. from the Paris climate accord to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Fifty-five per cent of respondents told the Angus Reid Institute they agreed that, given concerns about the U.S., Canada should “hold off on carbon pricing.”

Forty-five per cent said it shouldn’t matter what the U.S. does and that “Canada should implement carbon pricing now.”

ANGUS REID INSTITUTE

Respondents from the resource-dependent provinces of Saskatchewan (67 per cent) and Alberta (65 per cent) were more likely to support pressing pause on federal carbon plans.

Sixty-eight per cent of New Brunswickers surveyed also advocated for halting carbon pricing.

Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall, an outspoken critic of the carbon tax, has threatened to take the feds to court over the matter. Last January, the Alberta NDP government rolled out a carbon tax, starting at $20 per tonne.

However, 54 per cent of respondents from British Columbia — where a carbon tax has been in place since 2008— and 52 per cent of those from Quebec — which uses a cap-and-trade system — said the domestic policies of the U.S. should not matter on this issue.

ANGUS REID INSTITUTE

The polling firm found that overall support for a national carbon tax has dropped to 44 per cent from 56 per cent in April 2015, when the Tories were in government and such an initiative was a hypothetical.

In November 2015, shortly after Liberals formed government, support for the tax was at 52 per cent.

The Trudeau government’s plan is most unpopular in Saskatchewan, with 71 per cent of respondents telling the firm they oppose the strategy. Only a slim majority of Quebec respondents — 55 per cent — are feeling positive about the tax.

ANGUS REID INSTITUTE

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