Navigator’s Executive Chairman Jaime Watt joins The House with Chris Hall on CBC Radio to weigh in on Justin Trudeau’s headline-making trip to India and the upcoming 2018 budget.
Navigator’s Executive Chairman Jaime Watt joins The House with Chris Hall on CBC Radio to weigh in on Justin Trudeau’s headline-making trip to India and the upcoming 2018 budget.
After several years of standing down on the issue of the carbon tax, conservative parties and politicians are no longer willing to sit idly by and allow the Liberals to steer the agenda.
In October 2016, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau‘s announcement that Canadian provinces would be required to adopt carbon pricing was met with wide political agreement.
Both the United States and China had recently agreed to the Paris climate accord, and provincial governments in Canada’s three largest provinces had already committed to some form of carbon pricing.
Alberta, home of Canada’s most abundant oilsands and a traditional bastion of conservative support, had broken with decades of Progressive Conservative leadership, electing an NDP government that presented carbon pricing as a critical part of the oil industry’s social licence to export its products to market. Across the country, Liberal provincial governments held power. Conservatives were at a historically low ebb.
Former prime minister Stephen Harper‘s inability to adequately address climate change had hurt perceptions of Canadian resources; a new approach was needed.
What a difference 16 months make. Alberta is locked in a battle with its provincial counterparts in British Columbia over the Trans Mountain Pipeline. While the federal government has expressed support for the project, the provincial governments are no longer in the same agreeable position.
Albertans, who have long memories of the misguided National Energy Program devised by Pierre Elliott Trudeau‘s government, are increasingly conscious of the oilsands’ vulnerabilities and are strongly resistant to any measures that may diminish its growth.
Enter Jason Kenney.
Breaking from years of the Alberta Progressive Conservative Party’s efforts to court a bigger tent of voters, the former Harper cabinet minister has united the province’s right-wing forces under a series of unapologetically conservative stances, including strident opposition to the carbon tax.
As this takes place, action and rhetoric from the Trump administration has added pressure to Canadian oil producers.
While Prime Minister Trudeau and former U.S. president Barack Obama struck similar tones about building social licence for oil extraction, Trump has a drastically different vision for competitiveness, unlocking millions of jobs by slashing regulations.
Suddenly, carbon pricing is facing serious political headwinds as conservatives across Canada spring into action.
While some Conservatives briefly toyed with Michael Chong’s plan for a revenue-neutral carbon tax, Andrew Scheer won the leadership race by promising to scrap carbon pricing. He rejects the premise that taxes can fight climate change and has ardently emphasized their impact on affordability. The recent political climate has only contributed to his resolve.
He has allies. With Trump’s election, the Liberal’s newly created Canadian Energy Regulator and the harsh impact of the oilsands downturn on our national productivity, carbon pricing is beginning to feel like too much too soon for many Canadians.
And in an era where political conversations are increasingly framed around affordability, the added burden of taxes has become problematic.
This explains the recent shift in Ontario politics. Former Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leader Patrick Brown shocked pundits and delegates alike when he announced his support for a revenue-neutral carbon tax in March 2016. Many pundits saw this as a critical point in national discussions around carbon pricing.
But his swift removal as leader has provided a window for anti-carbon-pricing advocates to rebound in Ontario. While there may have been no appetite for such a position in 2016, leadership candidates are now willing to fight against carbon taxation in spades.
All three leading leadership candidates for the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario have promised to oppose cap and trade, carbon taxation and any form of carbon pricing in no uncertain terms. Call it pandering. Call it impractical. But it represents a growing and formidable opposition from the most likely candidates to take over as premier of Canada’s largest province this June.
To add to that, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe threatened that Trudeau’s government would enforce the carbon tax on his province over his ” dead body.”
What’s clear is that after several years of standing down on the issue of the carbon tax, conservative parties and politicians are no longer willing to sit idly by and allow the Liberals to steer the agenda.
What’s problematic for the federal government is that, in many provinces, those same vocal opponents look to be set on a path to power.
Just as the political tides have turned on this issue before, it seems they have once again – at least amongst the conservative base.
The result? Prime Minister Trudeau has a fight on his hands.
Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservative strategist.
Navigator’s Executive Chairman Jaime Watt joins CBC’s The National to weigh in on ousted Patrick Brown’s entry into the Ontario PC leadership race, which was caused by his resignation amid sexual misconduct allegations.
“I do not believe there is malicious intent by Toronto Police,” writes Jaime Watt, but a vulnerable community, that has been targeted by a serial killer, desperately needs protection.
Last week, Toronto celebrated an inauspicious occasion: the 37th anniversary of Operation Soap.
Better known as the Toronto bathhouse raids, Operation Soap saw dozens of Toronto police officers storm four bathhouses and arrest more than 250 gay and bisexual men on a variety of humiliating charges. Lives were changed forever — jobs lost, reputations destroyed, personal relationships left in tatters, lives taken by suicide.
The next night, thousands of LGBTQ Torontonians took to the streets with the message that enough was enough; stunning the city with the ferocity of their protests.
It marked the beginning of change between the LGBTQ community and governments at all levels. Finally, officials began to understand the damage they had inflicted on often vulnerable and marginalized people.
Since that time, there have been all kinds of legislative accomplishments and relationships between LGBTQ people and governments have grown close, if not downright cozy.
Today, it is difficult for many to truly understand the symbolic importance of the Gay Village. Church and Wellesley seems more like a secondary traffic artery, spattered with no-name pharmacies, second-rate fast-food restaurants and unassuming bars — at least from the outside.
But the truth is that this corner has been a home to thousands of Canadians.
It can be profoundly isolating to be a member of the LGBTQ community. To grow up understanding oneself to be “different” is an experience that many of us struggle to shake even well into adulthood.
Toronto’s Gay Village has been a sanctuary, a home, a place to embrace just who you are.
More than one public official has questioned why gay spaces or gay celebrations, such as Toronto Pride, still need to exist when extensive regulatory and legislative changes have been made to protect LGBTQ Canadians.
The last several months in Toronto have provided the answer.
For many years, segments of the LGBTQ community have protested their experiences with police. Advocates have argued that members of the trans community and people of colour continue to be treated differently than cisgender and white members of the LGBTQ community.
They argue these same segments of our community have been silenced, ignored and abused by institutional biases.
This public angst threatens to disrupt the relative harmony many felt had developed between the LGBTQ community and the Toronto police in the decades since the bathhouse raids.
Public battles, like the Black Lives Matters protest at Pride Toronto 2016 and the subsequent banning of the police from participation in the Pride Parade, fractured opinions of the LGBTQ community.
While much progress has been made, it has become abundantly clear that many challenges remain in the way the Toronto Police interact with the LGBTQ community.
Advocates have always had a point, and statistics have backed them up. There have been long-standing issues, including a number of unsolved missing persons cases, a propensity for police to arrest vulnerable people in the community, and sporadic efforts at crackdowns. This has painted a negative picture about the relationship between the police and a community.
Three recent cases have put a starkly human face on these issues.
In late November, 22-year-old Tess Richey disappeared after a night out at Church and Wellesley. Police responded with an investigation, but failed to uncover anything until Richey’s mother found her daughter’s body at a construction site mere metres from where she was last seen. Police called the incident a “misadventure” for several days. Last week, second-degree murder charges were laid.
Alloura Wells, a missing trans woman, was found dead on Aug. 5 of 2016. Police failed to identify Wells until November 2017, when her father went to the media. When he tried to report her missing at a Toronto police station, he said he was told that due to her past history, she was not considered high priority. Instead, he was given a non-emergency line to contact.
But the most infamous case is that of alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur. Activists and advocates have been warning that older gay men seemed to be disappearing for years now. Last summer, a poster circulated with the pictures of the missing men, warning of a potential serial killer.
Toronto police responded by denying that a serial killer existed. In a move that revealed the community’s distrust of the police, a neighbourhood association organized to provide walks home to allow for a measure of safety for those who felt threatened.
Months later, the community was proved right. McArthur has been charged with multiple counts of first-degree murder. It is alleged he had been targeting gay men for years, killing at least five. The number of charges seem likely to increase as the investigation continues.
That police denied the existence of a threat when one so plainly existed undermines their mission to provide support for a community that is so often the target of violence, harassment and discrimination.
I do not believe there is malicious intent by Toronto Police. Rather, the challenge lies in the nature and characteristics of the problem. When police raided the bath houses many years ago, the laws and regulations which were at the essence of the problem could be pointed to, identified and fixed.
Today’s challenge is actually more daunting. The Toronto Police Service must reflect on how to change a culture and how to protect a community that so desperately needs that protection.
A community of vulnerable people depend on it. And all of us must speak out and acknowledge that change needs to occur.
Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservative strategist.
Navigator’s Executive Chairman Jaime Watt joins CBC Radio’s Metro Morning to discuss the Ontario Liberals’ AGM over the weekend, as well as the latest with the PCs as they enter the leadership race.