Skip to content

Prince George Conservative MP ramps up carbon tax attack during Terrace visit

MP Bob Zimmer joined by Skeena-Bulkley Valley candidate Ellis Ross slam Trudeau and Eby
web1_240404-tst-bob
B.C. United Skeena MLA Ellis Ross, left, and federal Conservative Member of Parliament Bob Zimmer from northeastern B.C. outside of Skeena - Bulkley Valley NDP MP Taylor Bachrach’s Terrace office March 26. Bachrach voted against a Conservative non confidence motion to halt the April 1 planned increase in the carbon tax in Parliament last week. If successful, would have triggered a federal election. Ross and Zimmer wanted to emphasize how Bachrach voted. (Terrace Standard Staff)

Federal Conservatives are aligning themselves more than ever with B.C. political parties opposed to taxing carbon.

Speaking in Terrace yesterday (March 26), Conservative Member of Parliament Bob Zimmer repeatedly connected B.C. Premier David Eby with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in criticizing a scheduled increase in the carbon tax as of April 1.

Although the carbon tax in B.C. is a provincial one and began in 2008, a full decade before a federal tax was implemented elsewhere in Canada, Zimmer said they are, in effect, one and the same because the federal one would have applied in B.C. if B.C. did not have one of its own.

The scheduled April 1 increase will raise the price of carbon from $65 a ton to $80 a ton representing a hike of approximately three cents on a litre of gas. The increase also applies to home heating fuels such as natural gas.

“This is about energy, this is about affordability, it’s about the cost of living and we have a provincial government and a federal government [that] just don’t care,” Zimmer said.

“I’m just saying that the premier and prime minister are very much working in lockstep.”

He pointed to this October’s provincial election as a chance for B.C. voters to express their opposition to the carbon tax regardless of its origin.

“We have two parties in the province that are running provincially that say, hey, we’re going to go along with what [federal Conservative leader] Pierre Poilievre is saying [that] if we get elected, we’re going to actually axe the carbon tax,” Zimmer said.

“We just applaud those parties for doing so.”

Zimmer declined to name the B.C. United Party or the provincial Conservative Party, both of whom are pledging to eliminate the provincial carbon tax.

Nor would he express a preference for either one.

“I don’t have a membership in any provincial party, but I will say I am most definitely 100 per cent against this premier, Premier Eby, and really what he’s doing to the province and that’s what I am not going to be on the fence over. They’re ruining the province.”

Zimmer, who represents the Prince George — Peace River — Northern Rockies riding, made the statements in front of Skeena - Bulkley Valley NDP MP Taylor Bachrach’s Terrace office to emphasize Bachrach voted against a Conservative non-confidence motion last week in Parliament. If a majority of MPs had voted in favour of halting the April 1 increase, it would have resulted in a federal election.

“The NDP federally continues to prop up Justin Trudeau and the corrupt Liberals,” Zimmer said.

Zimmer was joined by B.C. United Party Skeena MLA Ellis Ross who won’t be running again in this fall’s provincial election because he has been named the federal Conservative candidate for the Skeena - Bulkley Valley riding.

Ross added to Zimmer’s comments, saying seven of Canada’s premiers have signed on to the federal Conservative campaign to halt the planned April 1 tax increase.

He said Eby’s comment that Poilievre’s political policies come from a “baloney factory” was “heartless and cruel.”

That comment was made when Eby was in Terrace three weeks ago and asked for his opinion on Poilievre’s plan to eliminate the carbon tax.

“It’ll hit gas, oil, agriculture, transportation,” Ross said. “And on top of that by 2035 you will not have the choice to buy an electric or gas or diesel truck in B.C. All manufacturers must provide electric vehicles so you will not have a choice.”



About the Author: Rod Link

Read more