For day at least Canadians can again feel good about their country.
Mere
hours after defeating Stephen Harper, Canadian Prime
Minister-designate Justin Trudeau has told US President Obama that he
will withdraw Canadian jets from Syria and Iraq.
21
October, 2015
According
to Reuters, the pledge was made as President Obama called to
congratulate Trudeau on his election win.
The
Liberal leader ran on a promise to withdraw Canada's CF-18 bombers
from the US-led coalition's military campaign against the
self-proclaimed Islamic State terrorist group. Earlier this year,
Canada's Liberal Party fought against the Conservative government's
proposal to extend combat missions from Iraq into Syria.
On
the campaign trail, Trudeau also floated the idea that his
administration may consider bolstering local forces in the region,
and increasing Canada's humanitarian aid.
Earlier
on Tuesday, the US State Department addressed questions as to whether
or not it was concerned that Canada's new government may not support
US foreign policy regarding IS presence in Afghanistan.
"These
are all decisions the Canadian people have to make and Canadian
legislators have to make…and their Prime Minister [has to make],"
department spokesperson John Kirby told reporters.
"We
have stood shoulder to shoulder with Canadian armed forces…in Iraq
and Afghanistan," he added.
Canadians Oust Stephen Harper, Right-Wing PM Who Ignored Climate Change & Shunned First Nations
Democracy Now!
Canadian voters have unseated right-wing Prime Minister Stephen Harper after nearly a decade in office.
In a surprise result following the closest election campaign in recent history, the centrist Liberals jumped from third place to a parliamentary majority. Liberal leader Justin Trudeau will become Canada’s next prime minister. Harper’s loss ends a tenure that saw him take three elections despite his Conservative Party never winning more than 40 percent of the vote.
For a hostile stance on the environment and other signature right-wing policies, a recent headline in The Guardian called him "the last remnant of George W Bush in North America." Monday’s result is also a major loss for the traditionally leftist New Democratic Party, which fell from holding Official Opposition status to third place.
The NDP led the polls in August but lost momentum as its leadership drifted toward the middle. Trudeau has pledged to reverse some of Harper’s key policies while backing others, including the C-51 surveillance law — known as "Canada’s Patriot Act" — and the Keystone XL pipeline.
We discuss the Canadian elections with two guests: indigenous attorney and law professor Pamela Palmater, and Judy Rebick, founder of Rabble.ca, one of Canada’s leading independent news websites
Canadian voters have unseated right-wing Prime Minister Stephen Harper after nearly a decade in office.
In a surprise result following the closest election campaign in recent history, the centrist Liberals jumped from third place to a parliamentary majority. Liberal leader Justin Trudeau will become Canada’s next prime minister. Harper’s loss ends a tenure that saw him take three elections despite his Conservative Party never winning more than 40 percent of the vote.
For a hostile stance on the environment and other signature right-wing policies, a recent headline in The Guardian called him "the last remnant of George W Bush in North America." Monday’s result is also a major loss for the traditionally leftist New Democratic Party, which fell from holding Official Opposition status to third place.
The NDP led the polls in August but lost momentum as its leadership drifted toward the middle. Trudeau has pledged to reverse some of Harper’s key policies while backing others, including the C-51 surveillance law — known as "Canada’s Patriot Act" — and the Keystone XL pipeline.
We discuss the Canadian elections with two guests: indigenous attorney and law professor Pamela Palmater, and Judy Rebick, founder of Rabble.ca, one of Canada’s leading independent news websites
Canada’s
Harper follows fellow “climate villain” Abbott into political
oblivion
20
October, 2015
In
less than two months, the two political leaders named by New
Statesman as the “world’s worst climate change villains” have
been tossed out of power: Australia’s Tony Abbott by his own party,
and Canada’s Stephen Harper in a national poll.
It
is good news for the upcoming Paris climate change talks. Both
countries, under their former leaders, ranked at the bottom of the 34
countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) for their efforts on climate change. Among G20
countries, only Saudi Arabia ranked lower than them.
Since
their elections – Harper in 2006, and Abbott in 2013 – they had
applied the brakes on climate change and renewable energy policy,
despite some strong efforts at sub-national levels (the provinces in
Canada and states and territories in Australia)
During
a visit to Canada last year, Abbott and Harper decided to create
a “conservative alliance among ‘like-minded’ countries” to
try to dismantle global efforts on climate change.
At
a press conference, Harper applauded Abbott’s efforts to dump
Australia’s carbon tax. Indeed, Abbott had borrowed the “axe the
tax” slogan from an earlier Canadian campaign.
Now,
both have gone. Abbott became a victim of his own poor polling and a
push to replace him with
the
more moderate Turnbull. Harper’s Conservative Party has been
stunned by the revival of the Liberals, led by Justin Trudeau, the
son of former prime minister Pierre Trudeau.
Both
new leaders promise more on climate change. Turnbull does not believe
the climate science is crap, and the Liberals have vowed to take
action. But what will they change in the form of policies?
Turnbull
– barely credibly, but because of unstated commitments to the
conservative rump in his party – has said that Australia’s 2030
emissions reduction targets will not change. He even defends Direct
Action, a policy he once lampooned.
And,
on Tuesday, he questioned whether Australia needed an institution
such as the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, the institution that
Abbott vowed to dismantle, but couldn’t. The CEFC has been at the
heart of all major initiatives on large scale renewables and
financing for rooftop solar and energy efficiency in the last two
years.
Trudeau
has promised to tackle climate change as one of three big priorities
of his new government – along with repairing relationships with
Barack Obama and ending bombing runs on Islamic State, and focusing
instead on humanitarian interventions. But there are few details.
He
has promised to attend the Paris climate conference, along with
provincial leaders, and within 90 days, hold a meeting with these
First Ministers “to work together on a framework for combating
climate change.” Central to this would be the creation of national
emissions reduction targets.
But
not everyone is impressed, because Trudeau has not stated what his
targets will be. As one columnist in the Toronto
Start lamented, Canada has a history of promising big on climate
but delivering little.
“If
past practice is the best indicator of future conduct, it won’t
matter what target Trudeau sets because the Liberals will miss it as
they’ve missed every other target they’ve ever announced going
back 22 years,” Lorrie Goldstein wrote.
“The
Liberals never implemented Jean Chretien’s 1993 promise to reduce
Canada’s GHG emissions to 20% below 1988 levels by 2005.
“Subsequently,
Chretien promised in 1997 under the UN’s Kyoto accord, to reduce
Canada’s emissions by a less ambitious average of 6% below 1990
levels between 2006 and 2012.
“By
the time Chretien’s successor, Paul Martin, lost power to the
Conservatives in 2006, the Liberals were 30% over that target.
“That
isn’t surprising given that top Chretien aide Eddie Goldenberg
admitted in 2007 the Liberals knew they couldn’t meet their Kyoto
target when they agreed to it.
“Ironically,
that’s the real reason Canada today is viewed, as Trudeau repeats
ad nauseam, as an international climate pariah.”
Harper
tore up Canada’s Kyoto targets, but while he promised to reduce
Canada’s GHG emissions to 30% below 2005 levels by 2030, few
expected him to actually achieve it.
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