Bob Rae reaches out to the West on energy policy - Action News
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Bob Rae reaches out to the West on energy policy

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae held up the Liberal Party as the best way to bring national leadership and sustainable development to Canada's resource wealth, especially in the oil sands.

Interim Liberal leader says his party can offer leadership and sustainable development

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae speaks with the media on Parliament Hill in October. Thursday he gave a speech at the Canadian Club in Toronto about Canada's resource wealth. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae promoted the Liberal Party as the bestway to bring national leadership and sustainable development toCanada's resource wealth, especiallyin the oil sands,in a speech today at the Canadian Club in Toronto.

Rae touted the Liberals as a middle ground between the Conservatives, whom he implied are employing partisan rhetoric when it comes to discussing what he called "carbon pricing," and the NDP, which hesaidsees resource wealth as a curse,a characterization he described as "simplistic nonsense."

He saidthe oil sands are a "great advantage, but like anything, can be exploited for short-term gain and then squandered."

Rae suggested a number of measures that should be adopted in the development of energy resources:

  • The full participation by First Nation, Inuit and Mtis peoples.
  • Speeding up apprenticeship programs to provide skilled trades people in the energy section.
  • End subsidies on fossil fuels.
  • Government should leaddiscussions about an east-west pipeline from Alberta to the Maritimes.
  • A rational approach to carbon pricing as opposed to heavy regulations, with breaks for low income regions and households.
  • Aclear set of policies about foreign investment in energy resources.
  • Aneutral, science-based approach to the proposed Enbridge pipeline route.

Reaching out to the West

Rae emphasized that it's "wrong-headed" to pit resources against the manufacturing section, in a clear shot at NDP Leader Tom Mulcair who has lamented that the high Canadian dollar, pumped up by oil and gas revenues, is hurting the Ontario manufacturing sector. Rae suggested instead an "industrial strategy" that would see lower taxes on manufacturing.

Rae's speech Thursday is another example of the Liberal Party reaching out to the West, a region it has been all but shut out of in recent years. The party has only four MPs in the entire region, and its support in some provinces in the last election was in the single digit range. There are no Liberal MPs from Alberta.

With a sense, perhaps, that there's nowhere to go but up, the Liberal Party, as it pursues its quest for renewal, especiallyin its leadership contest, is much more pivoted towards the West than it has been in years.

It's a contrast from the mood of the party in 2006 during the last Liberal leadership race.In thatcontestinvolving eight candidates,none were from the West and six were from Toronto. The winner, Stphane Dion from Quebec, campaigned on a policyhe called the "green shift,"in effect,a carbon tax.

The present Liberal leadershiphas a more western slant. It's expected that Vancouver MP Joyce Murray will announce her candidacy soon. Martha Hall Findlay, a former Ontario Liberal MP, launched her leadership bid Wednesday from Calgary. Her main organizer is Calgary-based Stephen Carter who ran the successful campaigns of Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi and Alberta Premier Alison Redford. David Merner of Victoria is considering a leadership attempt.

Also,the day after Justin Trudeau announced his interest in the leadership, he headed to Alberta. The name Trudeau is anathema inparts of the provincebecause of the still-simmering western resentment about thenational energy policy put in place by his father three decades ago. But Trudeau has told westerners he is not his father, andpointed out he wasonly 10 years old when the NEP was put in place.

The Liberal Party's Atlantic caucus, including MPs Scott Andrews, Wayne Easter, and Geoff Regan are on their way to Fort McMurray for what they call outreach meetings, as well as meeting with many of their own constituents who have left the east for jobs in the oil fields.