Simon Fraser University Professor and (Nobel-winning) Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change contributor Mark Jaccard has torn the BC New Democratic Party (NDP) policy document into little tiny shreds in an analysis released yesterday [PDF].
The NDPโs environmental proposals are not just doomed to failure, Jaccard said, they will also chase jobs from B.C. in the tens ofย thousands.ย
For people not from Canadaโs coast, the NDP is a traditional coalition of social policy progressives, labor activists and environmentalists. This particular iteration of the NDP, however, appears intent upon carving off its environmental arm in favour of pandering to the libertarian types who just love to scream about governmentย taxation.
The tax in question – the first formal carbon tax imposed by any jurisdiction in North America – is arguably the most progressive climate change policy on the continent. At just $10 a tonne, it is embarrassingly modest, but itโs aย start.
Rather than criticize it as inadequate (a completely reasonable position), the NDP has chosen to attack it as somehow unfair and as less effective than their (according to Jaccard) laughably incosequentialย alternative.
In fairness, Jaccard doesnโt use the phrase โlaughably inconsequential,โ but he posts a couple of nice graphs that show the consequences of the NDPโs previous initiatives. And he segues in the this commentary on politicalย cynicism:
There is, conventionally, no reason to be shocked or dismayed that your average politician might be tempted toward short-sightedness and expedience. But in Canada, the NDP once had a reputation for putting principle ahead of political gain. BC NDP leader Carole James promised to forge a new direction when she took over the party. ย Who knew this was the direction she wouldย choose?
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