• Bob
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    8 months ago

    It won’t be because people don’t care. The predictions right now show a conservative majority. Of course the other parties will try to make it about climate change but the reality is a lot of people simply think it’s not their concern. Rather it will be angled on cost of life and inflation and whatnot

    • Value SubtractedOPA
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      8 months ago

      Multiple elections have established that people do care. As the article points out, every federal election since 2008 (whoops, except 2011) has been won by a party that either promised a carbon tax, or had already implemented one.

      • @sbv@sh.itjust.works
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        78 months ago

        “promised” is the key word. We will eventually need to make lifestyle changes, but no party wants to wear that at election time. So we have delays:

        the federal government is internally tracking progress on as many as 115 climate-related policies. But “delays” in implementing some of the most significant policies are endangering Canada’s chances of meeting that 2030 target.

        • Funderpants
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          68 months ago

          One of the major causes of delays is provincial resistance. With the major provinces having conservative governments, roll outs are stonewalled at every opportunity. Friggen Sask over there threating to break federal law and refuse to collect a legal tax, for example. Alberta would rather burn the country to the ground than even think about something other than oil extraction.

          It’s ridiculous.

        • Value SubtractedOPA
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          28 months ago

          Yeah, you’re not going to catch me defending the current regime’s overall track record.

    • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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      78 months ago

      The predictions show a conservative plurality not a majority… that’s a significant difference because it’s extremely unlikely that the CPC will be able to form government.

          • @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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            68 months ago

            I think it’s a lack of civics education

            People see “punish municipalities for not meeting housing quotas” and think that’s a good idea

            They don’t understand that that means higher property taxes and an indefinite increasing housing minimum means that the municipalities will not keep up. (Among a vast amount of other issues)

        • @DoomsdaySprocket@lemmy.ca
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          17 months ago

          If this is from one of those phone surveys, then the only people answering the phones and actually doing them are boomers. Highly suspect numbers.

          I don’t know anyone that actually answers those surveys, even the people that initially pick up the phone.

          • @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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            17 months ago

            The 338Canada project is a statistical model of electoral projections based on opinion polls, electoral history, and demographic data.

    • @saigot@lemmy.ca
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      17 months ago

      We’re still 2 years off from an election unless something truly crazy happens, such projections are worthless.

    • Value SubtractedOPA
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      138 months ago

      I think single-issue elections are a myth, but there’s no doubt that that’s top-of-mind for a lot of people right now.

      • @thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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        58 months ago

        It’s not a single issue, though-- It’s many:

        • Inflation, especially cost of necessities (groceries, etc.)
        • Buying property is well out of reach for many people
        • Renting property is increasingly out of reach for many people
        • Stagnant or declining job markets
        • Interest rates and the cost of debt
        • (To a lesser extent) Carbon taxes and cost of energy

        And so on. Those problems are related in many ways, and well-summarized by the umbrella term “cost of living,” but I think it’s a mistake to think of it as a single issue… Both in general, and in the context of “single-issue elections.”

        • @Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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          27 months ago

          That list shows why the carbon taxes will be the target. Those first 5 account for basically all of the increased cost of living, but they are HARD problems. Not one of those presents a simple policy change that could even make a meaningful dent, and no one agrees on even the general approach governments could take to chip away at those.

          However, for the last one, politicians can promise to scrap it or carve it up like a thanksgiving turkey and, despite that having almost no effect on the overall cost of living for the average Canadian, it seems like an easy solution.

    • Nik282000
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      108 months ago

      It’s going to be lying about addressing the cost of living. Every politician will promise what ever it takes to get his ass into the chair, then they will figure out how many of their promises are achievable and which ones go against their business interests.

  • @Someone@lemmy.ca
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    -37 months ago

    I would love to be more environmentally friendly but unfortunately the financial cost of entry is too high. The answer isn’t to keep making gas more unaffordable, it’s already way more expensive to drive an ICE car than an EV. The issue is the people the carbon tax hurts the most are precisely the same people who can’t afford to buy something electric. There have got to be other ways to incentivize the switch for people who can afford it (and therefore don’t really notice a few extra bucks to fill up) while not overly punishing those who can’t. Maybe we should be putting a tax on new ICE vehicles proportional to their pollution, and put that towards a means tested/non-luxury ev subsidy so that they become viable to those who wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford a new car.

      • @Someone@lemmy.ca
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        37 months ago

        I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make. Should the fact that people like trucks take away from the unaffordability of every other vehicle? I’m sure if you only counted EVs since the rivian and lightning were released you’d see a similar proportion of trucks. Until you can get decent condition EVs under $10k there will be a group of people who are simply priced out of the market.

        • @Mossheart@lemmy.ca
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          27 months ago

          We can’t even get ICEs under 10k these days, it’s wildly unthinkable to expect we’d manage it with EVs.

          As for everything costing more, this is capitalism, every business out there is trying to extract every dollar they can from consumers. Until and unless a paradigm shift happens (ex: we stop trusting the private sector to solve issues, like housing for instance) we’ll keep getting what we’ve been getting.

          • @Someone@lemmy.ca
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            27 months ago

            I should’ve clarified I meant used under $10k. There will always be a segment of the population that can’t/won’t buy new just like on the high end there will always be the types of people who can’t keep a new car more than a year or 2.

    • Rolling Resistance
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      57 months ago

      Why is it always about cars with some people. They don’t seem to accept that alternatives [can] exist, and could start using them.

    • @Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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      37 months ago

      The carbon tax is currently 14.31cents per litre, that’s about 10%. It’s an incentive. To fully wipe out that cost, you don’t need to buy an EV, you could drive 10% less, or buy an ICE vehicle that is 10% more efficient (or some combination). That’s very easy to do in a country where most of us drive large vehicles, and make too many un-combined trips. Drop one trip in 10, or combine it with one of the other 9 and you get to spend your rebate money on beer instead of gasoline.

      Subsidies and special taxes are super in-efficient. Besides requiring a whole slew of bureaucracy to administer it, it never applies to everything fairly. That tax you suggest on new ICE vehicles doesn’t dissuade anyone from parking their jacked up f150 one day a week, and it doesn’t reward the person who buys a used car for their commute instead of a used SUV. All those little decisions get incentivized, and they allow people to make their own decisions about how to pollute less, instead of doing the 1 thing some government has decided to be the official, subsidized solution.