Our Time Campaign Manager Amara Possian “said in a recent blog post that the first 100 days of a new government are a critical time as the government lays out its plans and priorities,” CP adds. “With the Liberals held to a minority, they will need support from other parties to pass legislation and stay in power, which many environment groups see as leverage to push the Liberals to do more on climate change.”
Tag Archives: politics
The other question, less evident in this week’s coverage of the Encana decision but more clear in wider industry trends, is how much longer fossil companies will be able to offer any economic benefit to anyone, whether they’re “domiciled” in Calgary, the United States, or anywhere else.
Opinion | Alberta government pits jobs against wages in public sector | CBC News
going to have to deal with that somehow,” Toews told reporters on the
way into the legislature. “Obviously our total remuneration, total cost
of public service, is a function of volume times price. So, if the price
goes up we may have to look at further reductions in the public
service.”
Toews reiterated his argument that the province simply has no money for a wage hike.
So, if the “price” of the public service goes up, the “volume” of the public service will have to come down.
Who wins (and who doesn’t) from the new middle class tax cut? – Behind the Numbers
This new middle-class tax cut is not to be confused with the 2015
iteration that cut taxes most for those making over 100K. It’s also not
to be confused with the “universal tax cut” in the Conservative
platform, (although both would cost the same and have similar distributions).
The current Liberal version proposes to increase the basic personal
exemption from 13K to 15K, but in a slightly more middle class twist the
reduction gets clawed back as you approach the top 2% of earners who
are making over $150,000 a year in 2023 (the year this measure is fully
implemented).
Postmedia, Torstar Take Taxpayer Cash, Fight to Keep Public in Dark about Cuts | The Tyee
But at the same time they’re counting the cash, they’re continuing to fight in court to keep the public from learning about their 2017 deal that resulted in 36 newspapers closing across Canada.