2025 Federal Election
An In-Depth Campaign Trail “Interview” With Pierre Poilievre

David Clinton
Unlike Mark Carney’s performance to date, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has given multiple serious long-form interviews over the past months. But also unlike Mark Carney, Poilievre doesn’t have nearly as extensive an in-print record on policy. And, as far as I know, neither party has published comprehensive policy platform documents yet.
So as a follow-up to last week’s “interview” with Mark Carney, here’s The Audit pretending to sit down with Pierre Poilievre. The exchange began with these instructions to my AI:
Given everything you know about Pierre Poilievre and his Conservative Party, would you stand in for the Conservative leader for this pre-election interview. I want you to respond as though you are Pierre Poilievre and use everything that you know to provide robust and consistent answers.
Here’s the first question:
The Audit: You’re committed to providing opportunities for Canadians to join well-paying trades, but considerable job demand and training opportunities already exist: how do you plan to incentivize young Canadians to actually choose those paths – especially considering how few have shown sufficient interest until now?
Absolutely, we’ve got a massive opportunity here. Canada is facing a shortage of skilled workers—plumbers, electricians, welders, carpenters—the backbone of our economy. And you’re right, there are training programs and jobs out there, but not enough young Canadians are stepping up to fill them. Why? Because for too long, the system has pushed everyone toward university degrees, leaving the trades undervalued and overlooked. That ends with a Conservative government.
Here’s how we’ll incentivize young Canadians to choose these well-paying paths. First, we’re going to cut the red tape and fund more apprenticeships—real, hands-on opportunities where you earn while you learn. Under the Liberals, bureaucracy has choked these programs, leaving employers desperate and kids without options. We’ll partner with provinces and industry to double the number of apprenticeships within five years. That’s a commitment.
Second, we’ll bring back respect for the trades. I’m talking about a national campaign—ads, school outreach, you name it—to show young people that a welder can make six figures, buy a house, and support a family just as well as any desk jockey with a degree. We’ll celebrate the dignity of hard work, not just the prestige of a diploma.
Third, tax credits. If you’re a young Canadian starting in the trades, we’ll give you a break on your income tax for the first few years to help you get established. Employers will get incentives too—tax relief for hiring and training apprentices. It’s a win-win: businesses get the workers they need, and young people get a clear financial reason to jump in.
And let’s be real—part of the problem is Trudeau’s economy. Inflation’s through the roof, housing’s unaffordable, and kids feel like they’re stuck. They’re not inspired to take risks or try new paths. By axing the carbon tax, lowering taxes overall, and getting government spending under control, we’ll make it easier for young people to see a future where hard work in the trades pays off—literally.
The bottom line? We’re not just dangling opportunities; we’re building a system that rewards hustle and gives Canadians a real shot at prosperity. Next question!
The Audit: You’ve promised to lower climate-related and various other taxes. Assuming that those revenue shortfalls won’t be immediately filled by an instant energy boom, it looks like you’ll be reliant on significant program and civil service employment cuts to balance your budget. What specific cuts are you looking at?
I’m here to deliver straight talk on how we’ll balance the budget while putting more money back in Canadians’ pockets. You’re right to ask about the revenue side—when we axe the carbon tax and lower other taxes, we’re not banking on some magical energy boom to fill the gap overnight. We’re going to do what families do when times are tight: prioritize, cut the fat, and live within our means.
First off, let’s be clear—our plan isn’t about slashing blindly. It’s about ending the waste and getting government focused on what matters: delivering services Canadians actually need. Under Trudeau, federal spending has ballooned—nearly doubled since 2015—and what do we have to show for it? A bloated bureaucracy, endless consultants, and programs that don’t deliver. That’s where we start.
Specific cuts? Number one, we’re going after the $40 billion in annual corporate welfare—handouts to big businesses that don’t need taxpayer help. Why are we subsidizing profitable multinationals when small businesses and workers are struggling? That cash gets redirected to tax relief for Canadians and investments in critical infrastructure—like roads and bridges, which, by the way, tradespeople will build.
Number two, the civil service. Look, I respect public servants who do real work—nurses, border guards, the folks keeping us safe and healthy. But the federal workforce has grown by over 40% under the Liberals, and a lot of that is middle management and paper-pushers. We’ll freeze hiring, let natural attrition bring numbers down, and refocus on front-line services. No sacred cows here—every department, from Environment to Heritage, gets a line-by-line review to axe overlap and inefficiency. The goal? Get back to pre-Trudeau staffing levels within four years, saving billions without touching essential services.
Third, we’re scrapping failed Liberal pet projects. Take the $4.5 billion Canada Infrastructure Bank—supposed to build stuff, but it’s mostly a money pit for consultants. Or the ArriveCAN app—$54 million for a glitchy scandal-ridden mess. That’s done. We’ll redirect those funds to things that work, like speeding up housing construction by cutting red tape.
And here’s the kicker—we’re not just cutting for the sake of it. Every dollar saved goes back to Canadians through lower taxes or paying down the debt Trudeau’s racked up. We’ll balance the budget in our first term, and we’ll do it by ending the gravy train, not by punishing workers or gutting health care. The energy sector will rebound—sure, with our plan to unleash pipelines and projects—but until then, we’re relying on discipline, not fairy tales.
What’s your next question? Let’s keep this rolling!
The Audit: Can you give me one or two specific examples of “corporate welfare” that you’ll be cutting?
I’m happy to shine a light on the corporate welfare mess we’re going to clean up. Canadians are tired of seeing their hard-earned tax dollars funneled to big corporations that don’t need a handout, while they’re struggling to pay bills. Here are two specific examples of what’s on the chopping block.
First, let’s talk about the $2 billion the Liberal government has shoveled into the Strategic Innovation Fund for big players like Volkswagen and Stellantis to build electric vehicle battery plants. These are global giants with deep pockets—Volkswagen raked in over $15 billion in profit last year alone. Why are Canadian taxpayers footing the bill for their factories? Under a Conservative government, that’s done. If they want to invest here, they can do it with their own money—we’ll make Canada attractive with low taxes and less red tape, not handouts.
Second, take a look at the $1.3 billion in subsidies dished out to Bombardier over the years—hundreds of millions of that under Trudeau’s watch. This is a company that’s gotten bailout after bailout, yet still lays off workers and ships jobs overseas. In 2016, they got $372 million from Ottawa, no strings attached, while executives pocketed bonuses. Enough’s enough. We’re not in the business of propping up perpetual welfare cases—Bombardier can stand on its own two feet or face the market like everyone else.
That’s $3 billion-plus right there, and it’s just the start. We’ll comb through every line of corporate welfare—$40 billion a year’s worth—and redirect it to lower taxes for working Canadians and small businesses who actually create jobs, not beg for favours. That’s the Conservative way: reward hustle, not cronies. What’s your next question?
The Audit: You’ve been clear that you intend to increase the movement of energy products across the country. But, even if you repeal Bill C-69, how do you expect to convince Quebec, BC, and various powerful activist groups to agree?
I’ll tackle this head-on with the same common-sense approach Canadians expect from me. Getting energy moving across the country—whether it’s oil, gas, or hydro—isn’t just about jobs; it’s about affordability, energy security, and uniting this country economically. Repealing Bill C-69, the “No More Pipelines Act,” is step one—it’s killed projects with endless delays and red tape. But you’re right—Quebec, BC, and activist groups won’t just roll over. Here’s how we’ll make it happen.
First, we’re going to lead with facts and fairness. In Quebec, they’re proud of their hydro power—and they should be. We’ll frame this as a national energy strategy: Quebec’s clean hydro can flow west and east, while Alberta’s oil and gas move to markets. It’s not a zero-sum game. I’ll sit down with Premier Legault and say, “Look, your hydro gets a bigger market, your economy wins, and we all get cheaper energy.” We’ll streamline approvals for hydro transmission lines—same as pipelines—so Quebecers see the benefit, not just the burden.
In BC, it’s about jobs and dollars. Coastal GasLink and Trans Mountain are already in motion, despite the protests. We’ll double down by fast-tracking permits for LNG projects—think Kitimat, Prince Rupert—that bring thousands of well-paying jobs to local communities, including Indigenous nations who’ve signed on. I’ll meet with Premier Eby and say, “You want economic growth? This is it—billions in investment, not handouts.” We’ll also enforce the rule of law—blockades and sabotage won’t be tolerated. The RCMP will have the resources to keep projects on track, period.
As for activist groups—look, they’re loud, but they don’t speak for most Canadians. Polls show a majority want energy projects if it means jobs and lower costs. We’ll counter their noise with transparency: public hearings, yes, but with strict timelines—90 days, not years. No more endless stalling. And we’ll expose their hypocrisy—many of these groups are funded by foreign interests who’d rather see Canada’s energy stay in the ground while they profit elsewhere. I’ll call that out, loud and clear.
Here’s the clincher: money talks. We’ll tie federal infrastructure cash—like transit or housing funds—to provinces playing ball on energy corridors. If Quebec or BC want their share, they’ll need to stop obstructing what’s good for the whole country. It’s not blackmail; it’s fairness—every region has to contribute, not just take.
Will everyone agree? No. But leadership isn’t about pleasing everyone—it’s about doing what’s right. We’ll build a coalition of workers, Indigenous partners, and everyday Canadians who want cheaper gas and heat. That’s how we’ll get it done. Next question!
The Audit: In the context of your plan to cut GST on new home construction, how will you prevent the extra purchasing power in the hands of home buyers from sparking bidding wars and price hikes?
I’m glad you brought up our plan to axe the GST on new home construction—it’s a cornerstone of our strategy to make housing affordable again. The goal is simple: get more homes built and bring prices down so Canadians can actually buy them. But you’re right to ask about bidding wars and price hikes. Here’s how we’ll stop that from happening and make sure the extra purchasing power works for homebuyers, not against them.
First off, this isn’t just about giving buyers a tax break—it’s about turbocharging supply. By cutting the GST on new builds, we’re slashing costs for developers by 5% right off the bat. For a $600,000 home, that’s $30,000 back in their pocket per unit. That makes projects pencil out—especially mid-sized ones like townhouses and small apartments that have been stalled by Trudeau’s inflation and red tape. We’re pairing this with a “build, baby, build” approach: fast-tracking permits, cutting municipal fees, and tying federal funds to cities that hit housing targets. The result? More homes flooding the market—think 50,000 extra units a year within two years. When supply shoots up, prices don’t skyrocket, even if buyers have more cash.
Second, we’re targeting the cut strategically. The GST break applies only to new construction under a price cap—say, $800,000—to focus on starter homes and middle-class housing, not luxury mansions. This keeps the benefit in the hands of regular Canadians, not speculators or flippers looking to bid up million-dollar properties. We’ll also crack down on foreign buyers and house-flipping profiteers with tougher rules—no more letting them crowd out first-time buyers.
Third, we’re tackling the root causes of bidding wars: low inventory and crazy borrowing. Trudeau’s carbon tax and runaway spending have jacked up inflation, driving interest rates through the roof. We’ll axe the carbon tax, rein in spending, and work with the Bank of Canada to stabilize rates. Lower rates mean buyers aren’t desperate to bid beyond their means—they can borrow sensibly, and the GST cut gives them breathing room, not a license to overpay.
Will some builders try to pocket the savings? Sure, a few might. That’s why we’ll monitor prices and call out gouging publicly—market pressure works. But the data backs this up: when Australia cut taxes on new builds in the early 2000s, supply spiked, and price growth slowed within three years. We’ll do the same here.
The bottom line: more homes, smarter rules, and a grip on inflation mean the GST cut builds houses, not bidding wars. Canadians get roofs over their heads, not sticker shock. What’s your next question? Let’s keep this going!
The Audit: One more question: You’ve spoken a lot about boosting housing construction by rewarding or penalizing municipalities for their local home production. But does the federal government really have enough financial leverage to have an impact? And how will your plan take into account facts on the ground that might lie beyond the control of municipal governments?
I’m fired up to tackle this housing question—it’s at the heart of what’s broken in Canada right now, and our Conservative plan’s got the teeth to fix it. You’re asking if the feds have enough financial muscle to move the needle with municipalities, and how we’ll handle the messy realities they face. Let’s break it down.
Does the federal government have leverage? You bet it does. Ottawa sends billions to cities every year—think infrastructure cash like the $30 billion Investing in Canada Plan, or housing funds like the $4 billion Housing Accelerator. Right now, that money’s a free-for-all—no strings, no results. Under Trudeau, cities take the cash and still sit on their hands while homebuilding lags. We’ll flip that script. Our plan ties every dollar to hard targets: hit your housing starts—say, 15% above the five-year average—or your funding gets cut. Miss by a mile? You’re off the gravy train. On the flip side, exceed your goal? You get a bonus—extra cash for roads, transit, whatever you need. It’s carrots and sticks, and with billions on the line, mayors will feel the heat.
Take Toronto—gets over $1 billion a year from Ottawa for infrastructure. If they’re short 10,000 homes, that’s $200 million docked. Vancouver? Same deal. They’ll either zone for high-rises and cut permit delays, or they’ll watch their budgets shrink. The feds don’t control zoning, but we control the purse strings—and trust me, cash talks louder than council debates.
Now, what about those “facts on the ground” beyond municipal control? Fair point—cities aren’t all-powerful. Labour shortages, land costs, or provincial rules can gum things up. We’ve thought that through. First, we’re not just leaning on cities—we’re clearing the deck federally. Axing GST on new builds, slashing red tape for developers, and fast-tracking federal land for housing—like old military bases—means more shovels in the ground, no excuses. Second, we’ll adjust targets to fit reality. A rural town with no cranes isn’t held to Toronto’s standard—targets will scale to population, past performance, and local capacity. Stats Canada data shows housing starts vary wildly—Calgary’s at 15,000 a year, Halifax is half that. We’ll set fair bars, not fantasy ones.
And if a city’s bottleneck is out of their hands—like a provincial ban on greenfield development—we’ll step in. I’ll call up premiers and say, “Fix this, or your highway funds take a hit too.” We did the math: provinces get $20 billion a year from Ottawa in transfers. They’ll play ball when their own wallets are at stake. Plus, we’re boosting trades training—50,000 more workers in five years—so labour shortages don’t derail progress.
Will some mayors cry foul? Sure. But most Canadians—76% in a recent Angus Reid poll—say housing’s a crisis. They’re done with excuses. Our plan’s not about punishing cities—it’s about results. More homes, faster, period. That’s how we turn renters into owners and fix Trudeau’s mess.
2025 Federal Election
PPE Videos, CCP Letters Reveal Pandemic Coordination with Liberal Riding Boss and Former JCCC Leader—While Carney Denies Significant Meeting In Campaign

Howard Shen, a senior Liberal organizer and former president of the Jiangsu Commerce Council of Canada—now under scrutiny after Prime Minister Mark Carney falsely denied meeting the group during his January leadership campaign—is seen in a pandemic-era video delivering PPE alongside Liberal MP Majid Jowhari to the council’s president, Rui Jiang, in what appears to be a Chinese Communist Party–coordinated operation.
It is one of many concrete pieces of evidence emerging from a years-long investigation by The Bureau into the JCCC’s structure and leadership, exposing a significant overlap between this pro-Beijing business group and the Liberal Party of Canada itself.
After The Bureau first revealed that Peter Yuen, Mark Carney’s handpicked Liberal candidate to replace Paul Chiang in Markham–Unionville, had ties to pro-Beijing networks in Toronto, The Globe and Mail confirmed that Yuen held the title of honorary director of the JCCC, a group with documented links to Beijing’s United Front Work Department. The Bureau’s review of the JCCC’s activities suggests it functions as an elite platform for the Chinese Communist Party’s overseas trade messaging inside Canada.
While campaigning to replace scandal-weakened Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Carney met with JCCC leaders during a high-profile Lunar New Year event in Toronto. The group’s website described Carney’s entry into politics as “an important turning point in the upgrading of China–Canada relations.”
But when confronted by The Globe with web posts documenting the meeting, Carney flatly denied it occurred. “I’ve never heard of this group,” he said. “Certainly didn’t have a meeting with them—I’m sorry, you can’t believe everything you read in The Globe.”
Yet internal documents, public records, Chinese-language media, and event photographs confirm that the JCCC and Liberal Party networks in the Greater Toronto Area have long shared operatives and strategic objectives—even collaborating to send PPE to United Front Work Department officials in China during the pandemic.
The Bureau, along with diaspora researchers, has assessed that the Carney meeting was significant and included JCCC leaders involved in that same United Front–coordinated PPE operation that included Liberal riding boss Howard Shen.
Perhaps most significantly, while the JCCC has listed Carney’s Markham–Unionville candidate Peter Yuen as an honorary board chair, the same riding’s senior federal executive has been Howard Shen, also the past president of the JCCC.
The Bureau has sent detailed questions to Carney, the Liberal Party of Canada, and Howard Shen. As of publication, none have responded.
Shen has fundraised for Justin Trudeau since the 2015 federal campaign in Markham, appearing with then–cabinet minister John McCallum and many Toronto-area Liberal MPs. As a riding boss, he aligned with the rise of Mary Ng, who succeeded McCallum in a 2017 by-election and was subsequently appointed to Trudeau’s cabinet.
By 2017, Shen remained a Markham-area Liberal executive while simultaneously serving as JCCC president.
That year, JCCC held the Canada–China Free Trade Agreement Forum—one of the Trudeau era’s most consequential Chinese Canadian business gatherings—advancing JCCC’s calls for deeper trade with Beijing and alignment with the Belt and Road Initiative. The forum promoted reduced reliance on the United States and featured greetings from three Liberal MPs—Mary Ng, Majid Jowhari, and Shaun Chen—alongside Chinese officials including Consul General He Wei.
Also during the pandemic, Shen and the JCCC exchanged letters with Chinese Communist Party and United Front authorities. A 2020 letter from the Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the CCP, co-signed by Party Secretary Lou Qinjian and Governor Wu Zhenglong, praised the JCCC’s donations to China.
“In these difficult times, we thank the Jiangsu Commerce Council of Canada for their support in sending protective equipment and funds to help the people of Jiangsu,” the letter stated. “We also express our deep sympathy to overseas Chinese compatriots in Canada as the pandemic situation worsens.”
The JCCC’s reply—co-signed by president Rui Jiang and Howard Shen—acknowledged that its COVID relief effort was “organized under the guidance” of Chinese Communist Party bodies including the Jiangsu Overseas Friendship Association, United Front Work Department, and Overseas Chinese Affairs Office.
“The Canadian Jiangsu Commerce Council of Canada (JCCC) is one of the most influential associations in Canada,” that letter said, adding the group had “quickly raised funds and PPEs whose combined value amounts to nearly two million yuan.”
The letter was signed by Liberal riding boss Howard Shen, as “Past President of the JCCC.”
Photographs from this period show MP Jowhari assisting with PPE deliveries at a JCCC-organized event, carrying boxes from a Toronto residence to a vehicle.
In video footage dated February 17, 2020, Shen is seen passing a fluorescent-labelled PPE box from the front door of a mansion to Jowhari, who then hands it to Rui Jiang for loading into an SUV.
The sequence—featuring three figures tied to both Liberal politics and Beijing-linked organizations—visually underscores the JCCC’s declared coordination with Chinese state bodies.
In another video filmed inside the same mansion, Shen and Jowhari—wearing the same outfits—sit beneath a Chinese flag in a wood-paneled room alongside Rui Jiang, who appears in flowered slippers. MP Jowhari discusses his government’s eagerness to provide aid to China.
“Mr. Shen is the former president of our council,” Jiang tells Jowhari. Chuckling, Jowhari replies: “Howard is the president of everyone. Howard is the glue. He’s very well connected. He understands the community, and the government.”
By this point, Shen had transitioned to Vice Chair of the Markham–Thornhill Federal Liberal Association—a position he still holds.
A separate 2020 video shows Chinese Consul General Han Tao thanking Jowhari for “his support to the Chinese community, as well as to the work of the Chinese Consul General in Toronto.” These filmed moments further reinforce Shen’s dual role as a Liberal organizer and community leader acknowledged by Chinese state officials.
Corporate records reviewed by The Bureau show that in 2012, Shen and Rui Jiang were listed as directors of a similar entity: the Jiangsu International Business Association of Canada.
In perhaps the clearest example of JCCC–Liberal Party integration, in 2017—while serving as both JCCC president and Markham riding chair—Shen led the Canada–China Free Trade Forum. The event’s final report urged Ottawa to move quickly on trade with China, avoid human rights issues, and model Canada’s approach on Australia’s FTA with Beijing.
The document positioned Chinese Canadian leaders as “go-betweens” to guide Canadian officials and framed the U.S. as a liability. “Catch the China high-speed train,” the report said, calling the Belt and Road Initiative “the new global path.”
At the time, Shen’s name appeared on both Liberal electoral filings and Chinese-language United Front publications.
Further documents link Howard Shen to the Chinese Professionals Association of Canada. On February 15, 2014, Qiu Yuanping—then Deputy Secretary-General of the CCP’s International Liaison Department—met with CPAC. Around the same time, the Markham–Unionville Federal Liberal Association was formally established, and Howard Shen became a boss of the riding for the Liberals.
Shen’s ties extended beyond Liberal Party politics. In 2011, he joined the executive board of the Canada Hefei Friendship Association alongside Wei Wei, a Markham real estate developer whose luxury mansion was later raided as an underground casino.
Peter Yuen was named the Liberal candidate in Markham–Unionville in March 2025, following the resignation of incumbent MP Paul Chiang amid controversy over foreign interference. Chiang faced mounting scrutiny after The Bureau and other outlets reported on his comments suggesting that Joe Tay—a Conservative candidate and Canadian citizen facing an illegitimate national security charge in Hong Kong—could be turned over to Chinese consular officials in Toronto. The Liberal Party’s decision to tap Yuen—a longtime Toronto police official with prior affiliations to the JCCC and events linked to the United Front Work Department—has only intensified questions, especially as Prime Minister Mark Carney attempts to distance himself from the JCCC during the ongoing federal election campaign.
The Bureau will update this breaking story with any responses from Prime Minister Carney.
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2025 Federal Election
Trudeau and Carney Have Blown $43B on EVs

David Krayden
General Motors laid off 500 workers at his Electric Vehicle (EV) plant in Ingersoll, ON.
It had nothing to do with the tariffs.
It had everything to do with the plummeting fascination that Canadians have for EVs. They are selling like used Edsels in the late 1950s. In a useless attempt to create a demand for these “green” vehicles (which aren’t actually green at all because the production of electricity does not result from magic) the governments of former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Doug Ford wasted $42 billions of your tax money. And it was all to bolster an ideology not a demand for cars. There is no demand for these vehicles.
“You just lost 500 jobs. They’ve nuked those jobs. They’re not there anymore.”
-Dan McTeague

Ford, who saw this coming when he called an early provincial election that he knew he probably was going to lose if he waited for the anticipated vote, was actually honest to reporters when he admitted the layoffs had nothing to do with the dreaded Trump tariff but everything to do with public taste.
“What I understand from the president of General Motors that I spoke to, it’s going to be about 500 employees. Has nothing to do with the tariffs. He said, the volume is not there. People are not purchasing like they thought they would. So, they have thousands of vehicles sitting there. We make sure we support the workers and make sure that we get the government, especially Canada Post, to pick up some of these vehicles, because that’s what it’s geared for you.”

So, Ford expects Canada Post, another government agency on its last legs, to come to the rescue and pick up all these excess EVs? Sounds like it. The irony is that Ford came into office largely because the previous Liberal government had gone hog wild with its green energy program and hydro rates were among the highest in North America. Ford used to say that a industrialized province like Ontario can’t possibly prosper or even subsist on the energy provided by windmills and solar panels. He was right then but over the years he became firmly ensconced in the pocket of Trudeau and the Liberals, just as he is today with Mark Carney.

I spoke to my old friend Dan McTeague on Saturday about this mess. McTeague is a former Liberal MP from the GTA who is the president of Canadians for Affordable Energy today and well known for predicting gas prices across Canada as the @ gaspricewizard on X. As an MP, he always put principal above expediency, and he is no different today. McTeague is anxious for a Conservative Party of Canada (CPC) victory in this federal election and he is actively campaigning for a CPC nominee.

McTeague was not surprised over the dismal outlook for EVs.
“This is about Pierre Poilievre saying your policies are garbage. They’ve hurt Canadians. They’ve undermined the financial feasibility and sustainability of the federal government and the provincial government, and we’re going to get rid of them, just like we’re going to get rid of the CBC.”
-Dan McTeague
“Well, on the 22nd of March after having gone to the Ingersoll plant. I just tweeted a little while ago. I actually went there, filmed what was there in inventory. There were thousands of these vehicles just sitting there doing nothing. Obviously, Doug Ford didn’t get it on the 22nd of March. I said it says a lot about why the Ford nation is giddy about supporting Carney, he’s committed billions in world EV and battery manufacturing like this one in Ingersoll, where the provincial Feds kicked in over half a billion for bright drops. Was supposed to sell 100,000 units. Only sold 2100 actually, it got wrong. It was 2500 they might have probably given that a few away there. But look, this is anticipating what was there. It’s pretty obvious. I mean, I don’t just predict gas prices. Pretty good idea policies, EV mandates, the entire nets,” McTeague said.
McTeague explained that the “EV mandates are toast,” not just because President Donald Trump eliminated them but because they simply never had traction with consumers. He noted that Carney is playing games with the consumer carbon tax – because he hasn’t eliminated it but merely reduced it temporarily to zero – and has continued to keep emissions caps in place.
“Why are they doubling down on forcing us to have California-style appliances, which are extraordinarily costly to consumers. There are thousands of these things that are coming up. GFANZ, the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero that Mark Carney put forward, is now subject to antitrust review in the United States. This guy could be charged and billions of dollars taken away from the GFANZ organization,” McTeague said, adding that “anybody who hopped on the bandwagon a few years ago on net zero is now looking pretty damn foolish, and it’s amazing to see so many stunned Canadians falling in for this.”
“You just lost 500 jobs. They’ve nuked those jobs. They’re not there anymore.”

The former Liberal MP said the EV program is just one example of a failed economic record from the Trudeau-Carney regime. “However you slice it, the Liberals have had 10 years of failed policies. Net Zero has laid an egg. It’s not doing anything. And what they’re going to try to do is use a lot more public money and hopefully put enough wool over everyone’s eyes, so that we continue to go down this road of more recklessness as a result of what we’ve seen on EVs.
“Anybody who hopped on the bandwagon a few years ago on net zero is now looking pretty damn foolish, and it’s amazing to see so many stunned Canadians falling in for this.”
McTeague also wondered how the Ontario premier has moved from a commonsense politician on green energy to a cheerleader for Trudeau’s environmental authoritarianism. “For Doug Ford to have signed onto this. I mean, Shame on him, but it probably explains why he doesn’t want to support Pierre Poilievre.”
Said McTeague: “This is about Pierre Poilievre saying your policies are garbage. They’ve hurt Canadians. They’ve undermined the financial feasibility and sustainability of the federal government and the provincial government, and we’re going to get rid of them, just like we’re going to get rid of the CBC.”
“And so, for those reasons, you’re going to see why people are not supporting Pierre Poilievre, because they know, you know, they know which side of the bread is going to get buttered and for guys like Doug Ford, Bad mistake, back the wrong horse, and now we’re holding the bag. That’s why he called the election early.”
McTeague said the federal election is a watershed moment for people to decide what kind of future they want: prosperity or poverty. “If Canadians can’t get their head out of the sand and realize that they’re being duped that they can’t afford, you know, the saddling of the debts that these things are incurring for generations to come, and they think that somehow crapping on pipelines or putting emission caps that won’t allow us to make any more oil or gas to send these pipelines that they now suddenly have discovered are important … If we don’t wake up real soon, next two weeks, I can say confidently the next four years is basically cutting people.”
The energy expert predicted that the worst if yet to come if Carney wins a mandate to govern from the voters. “Nothing has changed, if anything, Mr. Carney and his company, as we well know, has lied on so many fronts. And here’s the big one that I’m going to say it here now, because I’ve said it many places before, but to be absolutely clear, you’re going to get a carbon tax, and that 20 cents you think you’re getting off. It’s going to be 40 cents by 2030, likely by the end of another government, “should they form a majority government.”
McTeague cautioned against Canadians becoming deluded and declaring, “Oh, we’re not worried about the future; we just don’t like Donald Trump, and we think Pierre Poilievre is like him.” Give your head a shake — because you know what, I’m going to spend a lot of time over the next few years, pointing back to the stupidity and frivolity of people. And make no mistake, David, these people know what they’re doing. They’re just trying to be cool and friendly because they made mistakes in 2015, 2019 and again in 2021 and they want to somehow think that they can justify bad decisions. What’s coming at the expense of the country? Coming at the expense of our economic sustainability? It’s likely coming at the expense of what concerns me even more so: the future of the federation of this country.”
“I’ve said it many places before, but to be absolutely clear, you’re going to get a carbon tax, and that 20 cents you think you’re getting off. It’s going to be 40 cents by 2030.”
Dan and I also discussed how he has discovered that much of the polling being conducted during this campaign is over-sampling people over 60, which comprise at least 50 percent of the respondents included in the surveys. This bodes well for Poilievre and the Conservatives.
Tomorrow I will be examining how the Consevatives are appealing to working class Canadians, labor union leaders and blue collar workers. Seeking and winning the “hard hat vote” worked for President Richard Nixon in 1972 and President Ronald Reagan in 1984. It can work for Poilevre too in 2025 — and somehow I think he realizes that.
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