Ontario’s Liberal leader says she will not introduce a provincial carbon tax if she is elected premier in the 2026 election.
“Let me be very clear. A carbon tax will not be part of my plan. Instead, I want aggressive action to build up transit, invest in electric vehicle infrastructure, reform land use planning to build livable, walkable communities,” Bonnie Crombie said in a video posted to X on Monday.
However, it’s not clear if this means Crombie is against the federal carbon pricing mechanism, or if this means she’ll bring back the cap-and-trade program in order to subvert the federal carbon pricing.
Premier Doug Ford’s government has been trying to link Crombie to the federal carbon price. They’ve been running ads dubbing her the “queen of the carbon tax,” suggesting she championed the policy when she was a federal Liberal MP.
Last month, the province introduced a law requiring any future government to put a new provincial carbon pricing program to a referendum.
“People know where I stand on the carbon tax,” Ford said at the time. “I’ve opposed it from the very beginning. My record couldn’t be more different than Bonnie Crombie’s.”
The carbon pricing referendum legislation would only refer to provincial measures, not the federal carbon pricing system that went into effect in Ontario after Ford’s government cancelled the previous provincial Liberal government’s cap-and-trade program.
Crombie also announced she has put together a “Climate Action Panel” to lead consultations on the Liberals’ environmental platform ahead of the next provincial election.
“We will ensure major polluters pay, but we will not have an Ontario carbon tax on consumers,” she said in a statement posted.
The climate panel includes caucus member Mary-Margaret McMahon, former Liberal environment and agriculture ministers, and the managing director of finance and resilience at the Intact Centre on Climate Adaption.