Pierre Poilievre Met With Denier-Backed UK Conservative Leader Kemi Badenoch

Badenoch, a self-described โ€˜net zero skeptic,โ€™ called Poilievre โ€˜a new friend and allyโ€™ in December.
Analysis
authordefault
on
Like Poilievre (left), Badenoch (right) has regularly voted against measures that would limit climate change.
Like Poilievre (left), Badenoch (right) has regularly voted against measures that would limit climate change. Credit: Pierre Poilievre / YouTube and Simon Dawson / Wikimedia Commons

Conservative leader and presumptive prime minister-in-waiting Pierre Poilievre hasnโ€™t articulated specific policies so much as rhyming slogans like โ€œaxe the taxโ€ and โ€œspike the hike.โ€ With the governing Liberal party in disarray and Conservatives leading the polls by almost 25 percent, Canadians need to know how Poilievre would lead rather than the opposition attack dog role he has played for many years.ย 

Poilievreโ€™s proposals on climate are particularly opaque. Cancelling federal carbon pricing has been his primary campaign plank, yet he has said little on what the Conservatives would do instead to combat the accelerating climate emergency.ย 

Important clues were on display when he recently met with the head of the UK Conservative Party Kemi Badenoch, who DeSmog has revealed to be backed by hardcore climate deniers.ย 

The admiration in their meeting was mutual. In a post on X, Badenoch called Poilievre โ€œan impressive and thoughtful political figure Iโ€™m pleased to have as a new friend and ally!โ€ Poilievre responded on Facebook that Badenoch โ€œstands for common sense, freedom and family. She has the courage to denounce and defeat toxic wokeism and restore ancient British liberties to the United Kingdom.โ€

Badenoch, a self-described โ€œnet zero skeptic,โ€ became leader of the Conservative party after their defeat in the UK general election last November. Like Poilievre, she has regularly voted in parliament against measures that would limit climate change. In 2022, she voted in favour of lifting the ban on fracking in the UK.ย 

DeSmog documented that Badenoch received a ยฃ10,000 donation to her leadership campaign from Neil Record, the chair of Net Zero Watch (NZW). This is a campaign group funded by the Global Warming Policy Foundation, described in a DeSmog profile as โ€œthe UKโ€™s most prominent climate science denial group,โ€ founded by former chancellorย Nigel Lawsonย with the purpose of combating what itย describes as โ€œextremely damaging and harmful policiesโ€ย designed to mitigate climate change.ย 

Parroting the positions of her financial backers, Badenoch has said that the UKโ€™s 2050 net zero target is โ€œarbitrary,โ€ โ€œset up with no thoughtโ€ and would โ€œbankruptโ€ the country. The net zero target was in fact based on a 277 page report from the Climate Change Committee โ€“ an independent body of experts created by the Climate Change Act of 2008 to advise the UK parliament and local governments on emission targets.ย 

The UKโ€™s official budgetary watchdog warned in 2021 that the costs to the economy of doing nothing to mitigate the climate emergency were โ€œmuch largerโ€ than meeting net zero targets, warning their business-as-usual forecast โ€œshows debt spiraling up to around 290 percent of GDP thanks to the cost of adapting to an ever-hotter climate and of more frequent and more costly economic shocks.โ€ In contrast, acting early to cut emissions toward net zero in 2050 would require public spending of only 0.4 percent of GDP per year.ย 

โ€˜Economic Nuclear Winterโ€™

Poilievre also has a consistent record of voting against environmental measures almost 400 times during his two decades as a member of parliament. In the same way that Badenoch falsely claimed UK policies to address the climate crisis would bankrupt the economy, Poilievre has based much of his messaging on misleading statements about affordability and the Canadian carbon tax.ย 

The Canadian Conservative leader hyperbolically claimed that the federal carbon pricing system on the books since 2019 will cause โ€œmass hunger and malnutrition,โ€ that โ€œinflation would run rampant, and people would not be able to leave their homes or drive anywhere.โ€ In this shark-jumping speech to the Conservative caucus in September 2024, he went on to describe a dystopian future of โ€œeconomic nuclear winterโ€ caused by the carbon tax.ย ย 

These statements are nowhere near the truth. A recent study by University of Calgary economists found the carbon tax had โ€œminimal impactโ€ on inflation or Canadian food prices, pushing up consumer costs only 0.5 percent in the last five years. Over 80 percent of Canadians โ€“ particularly low-income households โ€“ receive more in rebates than they pay in carbon costs.ย 

What is already leading to a dystopian future is rampant carbon emissions, which have already cost the Canadian economy $25 billion in the last 10 years due to increased droughts, forest fires and damage to infrastructure. Those impacts on economic growth are cumulative and expected to accelerate to $35 billion by 2030 and up $100 billion by 2055.ย 

The longer governments delay action on the accelerating climate crisis, the more expensive the impacts will be. A recent expert report showed Canadian GDP could fall by a staggering 12 percent by the end of the century compared to a stable climate scenario. The impacts on individual households are even more severe with incomes diminishing up to 18 percent.ย 

The most recent example of the costs of climate inaction is the devastating wildfires now ravaging southern California, which have already been named among the most expensive natural disasters in U.S. history. The clear connections between increased wildfires and carbon emissions are documented by peer-reviewed research. 2023 and 2024 were the costliest on record for climate related disasters, adding up to over $1 trillion in damages.

Poilievre has been clear on the need for fiscal prudence. So why has he been so silent on what is becoming the dominating economic issue of the century? Like Badenoch in the UK, Poilievre has focused on childish slogans rather than articulating grown-up positions to meet the climate emergency.ย 

You can tell a lot about a personโ€™s character by the company they keep. While Poilievre seems intentionally cagey about what โ€“ if any โ€“ climate policies he intends to enact, Canadians should take note of Badenochโ€™s clear brush off of our climate crisis.ย 

authordefault
Mitch Anderson is a Vancouver-based journalist covering climate and extraction industries.

Related Posts

on

Claire Coutinho endorsed several figures linked to the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a group that questions established climate science.

Claire Coutinho endorsed several figures linked to the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a group that questions established climate science.
on

Oil company was storing a fraction of advertised amount of CO2 at offshore project, data shows.

Oil company was storing a fraction of advertised amount of CO2 at offshore project, data shows.
Analysis
on

What the country craves is fewer selfies and more action to confront the emergency.

What the country craves is fewer selfies and more action to confront the emergency.
on

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?