Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Just in time for Earth Day, Liberals threaten multiple endangered … – Green Party of Canada |

VANCOUVER - The approval of the expansion at the Fraser Vancouver Port known as Roberts Bank Terminal 2 is a likely death sentence for several species, according to the Green Party of Canada.

"Honestly, I am shocked. The scientific information is clear. The Western sandpiper, the Fraser Chinook salmon and the Southern Resident Killer Whales are close to extinction and this is likely to push them over the edge. It brings new meaning to the word 'terminal.' ," said Green leader, Elizabeth May, MP for Saanich-Gulf Islands.

The federal impact assessment of the project was very negative about its environmental impacts:

The Panel concluded that two populations of Fraser Chinook salmon, the Lower Fraser and South Thompson River populations, are particularly vulnerable to Project effects due to their life history and extensive utilization of Roberts Bank habitat. The Panel concludes that the Project would result in a residual adverse effect and an adverse cumulative effect on ocean-type juvenile Chinook salmon populations from the Lower Fraser and South Thompson rivers. The effects would be significant (Impact Assessment Agency, 2020).

"Last year, in an open letter (February 2022) many prominent scientists urged federal environment minister, the Hon. Steven Guilbeault, to reject the expansion," it is unbelievable that this strong warning could have been ignored," said Deputy Leader Jonathan Pedneault. (see letter here:https://fraserestuary.scienceletter.ca/letter/)

"We deal on a daily basis with the contempt for environmental impacts as the Fraser Vancouver Port Authority uses the waters of the Salish Sea for free parking for its idling freighters," added Ms May. "It is time to review the whole structure of the unaccountable port authority system."

#####

For more information or to arrange an interview :

Fabrice Lachance Nov

Press secretary

514-463-0021

media@greenparty.ca

Read this article:
Just in time for Earth Day, Liberals threaten multiple endangered ... - Green Party of Canada |

Former Ontario Tory MP backing Liberal in byelection in riding – The Globe and Mail

*one time use only* Conservative MP Dave MacKenzie risesduring Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Friday February 18, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Adrian WyldAdrian Wyld/The Canadian Press

Having retired after two decades as a Conservative MP, Dave MacKenzie says he is now supporting a Liberal seeking to become his Southwestern Ontario ridings next representative citing concern over the Conservative nomination process for the race.

Mr. MacKenzie told The Globe and Mail on Monday that he is backing local realtor and former educator David Hilderley, who is aiming for the Liberal nomination in the eventual by-election in the riding of Oxford.

The by-election, which must be called before July 29, is required to replace Mr. MacKenzie Oxfords MP from 2004 to the end of this past January, when he stepped down.

The way this thing has gone in my riding from my former party, I just find David an easy switch for me, he said.

Since Mr. MacKenzies resignation, a nomination fight for the Oxford riding broke out that saw one candidate removed by the party, and senior Tories Pierre Poilievre and Andrew Scheer endorse the nomination campaign of the eventual winner, Mississauga lawyer Arpan Khanna.

Mr. Khanna served as Ontario campaign chair for Mr. Poilievres successful bid to be Conservative Leader and is currently the partys outreach chair. He ran unsuccessfully for the Tories in Brampton, Ont., in 2019.

Mr. Khanna won over a field that included Mr. MacKenzies daughter. But other party members in the riding were vexed, claiming they were poorly treated by party headquarters. Two Conservative Electoral District Association executive members in Oxford quit their posts after Mr. Khannas nomination.

Mr. MacKenzie said he has been concerned that Mr. Scheer strongly backed Mr. Khanna for the nomination: Why would Andrew Scheer want to bring a guy in from Brampton? he said.

Its not Stephen Harpers party or Peter MacKays party right now. It just operates differently.

I am not knocking Pierre. Pierres got some people around him that he might question at some point.

Mr. MacKenzie said there are still a few years left in his Conservative membership, and he has no plans to take out a Liberal membership.

Neither Mr. Khanna nor the Conservative Party responded to a request for comment.

A former police chief in the city of Woodstock, Mr. Mackenzie said he has not yet actually spoken to Mr. Hilderley, but plans to contact him soon to find out what help he can provide him for the nomination and the eventual by-election.

When I am in the riding, a lot of people say they are not happy, and they are looking for somewhere else to go. And people know David, and as soon as you say hes going to run, they are happy, Mr. MacKenzie said.

Mr. Hilderley, who previously ran provincially and to be mayor of Woodstock, was taken aback when informed of Mr. MacKenzies support.

Thats a very nice surprise a welcome one for sure, he said in an interview Monday.

I think the local party is very, very disturbed with what has happened in terms of a selection by their leadership, Mr. Hilderley said, referring to Conservatives in Oxford. They just want to have a local representative, a local voice, someone who knows the community representing them in Ottawa.

During the 2021 election, Mr. MacKenzie won the riding with 47 per cent of the vote compared with 20 per cent for the Liberal candidate. He said he would not presume his political shift will have a great deal of weight, but that he knows that some in the riding will be attentive.

Mr. Hilderley said the political situation in the riding may be shifting in a way that would give the Liberals their best opportunity to win the seat since John Finlay held it for them between 1993 and 2004.

We want to capitalize on that, he said.

Mr. Hilderley said he has lived in the riding all his life except for three years teaching in London, Ont. He spent 34 years working as a teacher, vice-principal, principal and consultant. He has run a bed-and-breakfast operation, and has been a realtor for 17 years.

Read the original here:
Former Ontario Tory MP backing Liberal in byelection in riding - The Globe and Mail

Liberals’ controversial online-streaming bill expected to pass: senator – CP24

Published April 19, 2023 6:21 a.m. ET

Updated April 19, 2023 6:25 a.m. ET

The Liberal government's controversial online-streaming bill is back in the upper chamber today, where a senator who opposed it expects it to pass.

After more than a year of debate and revisions, Alberta Sen. Paula Simons says she would really like to see Bill C-11 "done and dusted" this week.

She says this is not because she wants to ram it through, but because the Senate has already shown its worth through changes to the bill.

Last month, the House of Commons adopted most of the Senate's amendments, which reinforce the promotion of Indigenous languages and Black content creators.

They would also seek to ensure that funds collected from tech giants go toward promoting diversity, equity and inclusion.

If passed, Bill C-11 would update broadcasting rules to include online streaming and require tech giants such as YouTube, Netflix and Spotify to make Canadian content available to users in Canada -- or face steep penalties.

Follow this link:
Liberals' controversial online-streaming bill expected to pass: senator - CP24

NDP calls for Liberals to block extradition of Dr. Hassan Diab – New Democratic Party

OTTAWA NDP Justice critic Randall Garrison and Foreign Affairs critic Heather McPherson are calling on the Liberal government to block the extradition of Dr. Hassan Diab. On Friday, following more than a decade of being denied a fair process and having his rights violated, a French court sentenced Diab to life in prison in his absence.

New Democrats condemn the appalling 1980 terrorist attack on a synagogue in France, and we express our deepest sympathies with the victims and their families who are still seeking justice. They deserve concrete answers, said McPherson. But this entire trial has been a sham. Dr. Diab has lived through a nightmare for the last decade and unjustly spent three years in a French prison under tortuous conditions.

After the Harper government helped France extradite him based on faulty evidence, Dr. Diab was placed in maximum-security prison in 2014 and subject to solitary confinement, all without a trial. After dropping the charges against Diab in 2018 for lack of evidence, France restarted the process and now, the French courts have found him guilty without him being present to defend himself, and theyve given him no opportunity to appeal.

Everyone deserves the right to a fair trial, said Garrison. The horrible conditions Dr. Diab suffered over flimsy and discredited evidence violated his rights and poisoned the process. Given that no justice has been served, New Democrats are demanding the government block any attempts by France to extradite Dr. Diab.

See more here:
NDP calls for Liberals to block extradition of Dr. Hassan Diab - New Democratic Party

Nuclear energy is bringing some liberals and some conservatives together – Cardinal News

Keep up with our political coverage by signing up forour free daily email newsletterand our new weekly political newsletter, West of the Capital.

I dont know how to break it to them, but Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, perhaps the leading voice for the Democrats progressive wing, may have roughly the same position on a certain issue.

That issue is nuclear energy.

Youngkin, of course, is an enthusiastic cheerleader for nuclear energy. The highlight of the energy plan that he announced in Lynchburg last October was his call to put a small nuclear reactor a new species of nukes that are small and assembled off-site in Southwest Virginia.

Thats not particularly surprising in some ways. Historically, conservatives have always been more keen on nuclear power than liberals. What is surprising, then, are the relatively warm words that Ocasio-Cortez had for nuclear power after a recent visit to the site of the worlds second biggest nuclear disaster. On a recent trip to Japan, she went to the Fukushima nuclear plant, where the reactor was damaged by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011. Its been classified as a Level 7 event the most serious by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The 1986 accident at Chernobyl in what was then the Soviet Union and is now Ukraine is the only other Level 7 event, and it released more radioactivity. For comparison purposes, the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania is classified at Level 5.

Fukushima might seem an odd place to declare ones support for nuclear energy, and technically Ocasio-Cortez didnt do that. But she did post on Instagram a straightforward account of one of the consequences of the three meltdowns at Fukushima, beyond the hydrogen explosions and the release of enough radioactive xenon-133, iodine-131, cesium-134 and cesium-137 that theres still an exclusion zone of about 12 miles around the stricken facility. That consequence is that Japan is burning more fossil fuels.

After the explosion, Japans energy sources went from 30-40 percent nuclear to almost none, Ocasio-Cortez said. The flipside to that is the major drop in nuclear energy production has been made up in increased use of coal and fossil fuels, whose carbon emissions accelerate climate change. For someone concerned about increasing levels of carbon in the atmosphere, thats not a good thing.

While Ocasio-Cortez wasnt exactly endorsing nuclear energy, she hasnt ruled it out, either, and certainly seems to be suggesting that nuclear might be a better option than fossil fuels if renewables arent available. Even in 2019, when she and others were introducing the so-called Green New Deal, she specifically said she was leaving the door open to nuclear energy so that we can have that conversation. Since then, others on the left have been rethinking their skepticism of nuclear energy; if the goal is to create a carbon-free electrical grid, then maybe nuclear energy is the way to get there?

Bill Gates has become a vocal crusader about the dangers of climate change, authoring a book last year titled How To Avoid a Climate Disaster. One of his big solutions: nuclear power. Newsweek recently examined the changing politics in a piece entitled The Lefts Changing Position on Nuclear Energy. The Atlantic, whose readers probably skew left of center, examined the same thing in a recent story of its own. Although only a handful of the mainline environmental organizations are openly nuclear inclusive (for example, the Nature Conservancy), many quietly accept that nuclear power can be part of the climate solution, and perhaps a necessary part, the magazine writes.

Indeed, earlier this month, a trio of senators introduced a bill to promote new nuclear technologies one of them was Republican Shelly Capito of West Virginia but the other two were Democrats, Tom Carper of Delaware and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island. The longer list of co-sponsors was also bipartisan, as well, bringing together an unlikely alliance of Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, and Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina. Of the entire list of 10 sponsors and co-sponsors, they are equally divided between Democrats and Republicans. This statement from Booker rated by Progressive Punch as 97.62 liberal, making him more liberal than even Bernie Sanders is typical of how some on the left are starting to see nuclear energy: Advanced nuclear energy has a critical role to play as we race against the clock to reduce carbon emissions and address climate change.

The nations most powerful advocate for nuclear power is a Democrat: President Joe Biden. Thats not how hes usually identified, but that just goes to show how we as a society often misunderstand things. The Biden administration has quietly championed nuclear energy as a way to reduce carbon emissions. The 2021 infrastructure bill included at least $6 billion to promote nuclear energy. Last fall, the Department of Energy released a report on converting coal-fired plants to nuclear plants. In early March, the administration announced $1.2 billion in aid to extend the life of aging nuclear plants. John Kerry, now a special presidential envoy for climate issues, has been encouraging eastern European countries which have relied heavily on coal to convert those coal plants to nuclear plants, specifically the type of small modular reactors that Youngkin now wants to see in Southwest Virginia. Nuclear energy, including small modular reactors, represent a critical tool in the fight against climate change, and can also enhance energy security and boost economic prosperity, Kerry has declared.This may seem odd in the context of American politics, but not globally. In Canada, the governing Liberal Party is also investing in nuclear power. Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus government is investing $708 million (thats counted in our greenbacks, not their loonies) in the same type of small modular reactors that Youngkin wants.

One countervailing trend: Germanys left-of-center government shut down its last three nuclear plans over the weekend and is now out of the nuclear energy business. At one point, Germany had 36 nuclear reactors and generated one-quarter of its energy from them. It plans to replace that with renewables but also more gas and coal, so Ocasio-Cortezs point remains: The more a country relies on nuclear power, the less it will burn fossil fuels, at least for now. Those who pushed Germany to shut down nuclear insist this increased reliance on coal will be a temporary thing.

One traditional argument against nuclear energy is that it creates radioactive waste that doesnt go away anytime soon. The half-life of plutonium-239 is a mere 24,110 years, meaning that any plutonium-239 created now will be half gone in 24,110 years. And yet heres a curiosity: Even after its been used, spent nuclear fuel still retains more than 90% of its energy potential, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. Youngkin has suggested that one way to get around the radioactive waste problem is simply to recycle it. That has horrified some nuclear critics recycling nuclear waste might also open ways for some of it to be siphoned off for illicit purposes, such as making nuclear weapons, they warn. However, after her trip to Fukushima, Ocasio-Cortez spoke somewhat warmly about how France recycles radioactive waste, sayingthis is increasing the efficiency of their systems and reducing the overall amount of radioactive waste to deal with. Newsweek quoted a somewhat stunned nuclear energy consultant who says, Recycling is a much more tricky issue than she makes it out to be, which is another sign for me. If shes willing to make a good/bad, very simplistic determination on fuel recycling, and she decides its good, that is a stance that would have been seen as perhaps radically pro-nuclear in previous eras.

The liberals who are for nuclear power may not be for it for the same reason that conservatives are. Pro-nuclear liberals see it as a way to reduce carbon emissions (and perhaps take up less land than wind and solar, which are very land-intensive). Pro-nuclear conservatives, such as Youngkin, are distrustful that renewables can carry the entire load of our energy needs; they like the security of a plant thats running night and day, no matter the weather. And yet, even though theyve traveled different roads, some politicians from both sides are winding up in the same place.

The point is, the politics of nuclear energy are changing. So are the dynamics of the industry. The Atlantic article made the case that the biggest obstacle to the deployment of nuclear energy is no longer opposition on the left its the nuclear industry itself, which it depicted as being old and slow. Within the nuclear industry, though, is a new generation of innovators, and theyre the ones who are working on those SMRs. The newcomers have engineering backgrounds but few if any ties to traditional nuclear utilities, The Atlantic writes. They think that climate change is a dire problem and that time is short. They see themselves as innovators, in the same way that Apple upended the cellphone business or Tesla is disrupting the auto industry. This is the context that Virginia is now venturing into. Here, its Republicans many of them from coal country who are pushing these small modular reactors, but globally, its climate alarmists who are often their advocates (just not all climate alarmists, mind you).

Politics often produces odd bedfellows; heres yet another unusual pairing.

Over the course of this week, Im going to be devoting my columns to looking at the changing nature of the nuclear industry and how that relates to Youngkins quest to locate a small reactor in Southwest Virginia. Spoiler alert: None of this is designed to persuade people one way or another. Those who believe that its too dangerous to be splitting atoms, or believe that a nuclear reactor in Southwest Virginia amounts to making the region a sacrifice zone, will not find an argument to think otherwise. Likewise, those who are convinced that nuclear power is safe, reliable and necessary will not find an argument to dispute their confidence. I am not a scientist and bring no scientific expertise to such discussions. (Others may prefer the comfort of ideology alone to support their positions, pro or con.) I do, though, consider myself a pretty fair analyst of politics and the economy, so thats where my focus will be.

In the coming days unless breaking news such as a zombie outbreak interrupts the festivities I will look at these issues: Does Virginia in general and Southwest Virginia in particular have the workforce to support a larger nuclear industry? Why does the U.S. Department of Energy believe that coal plants would make good sites for nuclear facilities? And, finally, what are some of the practical considerations that should be considered about the prospect of mining uranium in Pittsylvania County?

Stay tuned.

Tomorrow: Do we have the workforce to support expansion of nuclear power?

Related

Go here to read the rest:
Nuclear energy is bringing some liberals and some conservatives together - Cardinal News