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click here to expandLiberal candidate Arlene MacFarlane- VanderBeek and Liberal...
Gas pains fuel ADFW election campaign
By Mike Pearson, Special To The Review
News
Sep 19, 2008
Rising gas prices are fuelling a key campaign issue in Ancaster, Dundas, Flamborough and Westdale.

Local Liberal candidate Arlene MacFarlane- VanderBeek believes her party has the answer. She will challenge Conservative incumbent David Sweet, New Democrat Gordon Guyatt, Peter Ormond of the Green Party, and Jamilé Ghaddar, who has registered her candidacy in ADFW for the Marxist-Leninist Party in the October 14 federal election.

MacFarlane-VanderBeek held a brief media event Monday at a Westdale gas station with Liberal MP Dan McTeague, opposition critic for consumer and consular affairs.

At the time of the event, gas prices were hovering around $1.38 per litre throughout Hamilton. By Wednesday, prices came down to about $1.26 per litre.

MacFarlane-VanderBeek said the high gas price is one of the key issues for local constituents in the upcoming election. “It’s their pocket books. That’s what’s at stake in this election,” she said.

MacFarlane-VanderBeek and McTeague both accused the governing Conservatives of turning a blind eye to the dramatic price increases that have greatly outpaced surges in the U. S.

McTeague, an oil industry analyst, said Canadian prices are being inflated by as much as 22 cents per litre. “In my wildest dreams, I could not have conceived these prices would have been passed on to the consumer,” he said.

To help relieve the gas pains, McTeague said a Liberal government will create an office of petroleum price information.

When it was first conceived by the previous Liberal government, the office of petroleum price information was designed to strengthen Canada’s competition bureau and discourage collusion.

McTeague said the office will hold oil companies more accountable for price increases that are often blamed on natural disasters, such as Hurricane Ike which touched down in Texas last weekend.

Under its Green Shift carbon tax plan, the Liberal party would tax household energy consumption, excluding gasoline, with offsetting personal income tax reductions.

McTeague also called upon the government to decrease the Goods and Services Tax on gasoline. Like most other consumer goods, gas is taxed at a rate of five per cent.

But Conservative MP David Sweet said a Competition Bureau probe that resulted in charges against 13 individuals and 11 companies accused of fixing gas prices in four Quebec markets, shows him there is already a federal organization successfully pursuing gas price gougers.

“They are continuing that probe,” Sweet said Tuesday morning, noting that his government has already cut the GST, one of several taxes charged on gas, by two cents.

Sweet also questioned the Liberal party’s suggestion to cut gas taxes when they are planning to introduce a carbon tax that, he said, will drive fuel prices further up.

The incumbent Member of Parliament for Ancaster-Dundas-Flamborough- Westdale said Prime Minister Stephen Harper has expressed his concern over gas prices and will make an announcement on the subject later in the campaign.

Green Party candidate Peter Ormond said Canadians need to shift their focus to sustainable energy while breaking the dependency on foreign oil. He noted fluctuating oil and gas prices are nothing new and Canadians should expect further increases because oil is not a sustainable technology.

“I think the time is now to move beyond debate and start investing in local solutions,” Ormond said. He identified sustainable solutions such as car sharing, using renewable energy and investing in local agriculture.

The Greens are also proposing a carbon cap and trade system and a carbon tax shift under the party’s Vision Green platform. In comparison to the Liberal Green Shift plan, Vision Green would tax non-renewable energy, including gasoline, with offsetting personal income tax reductions.

In response to the Liberal announcement on Monday, New Democrat Gordon Guyatt said increased regulation is needed to stop price gouging.

“They need more than information, he said, referring to the proposed office of petroleum price information. “They need regulatory control.”

He also touted the NDP’s cap and trade emissions plan that would target industrial polluters, rather than consumers. Guyatt said the plan will focus on capping the emissions of about 700 companies that collectively produce 50 per cent of Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Guyatt also dismissed the Liberal call to reduce the GST on gasoline. “It is ironic that the Liberals would be discussing reducing taxes on gasoline at the same time as they’re introducing a carbon tax,” he said.

Marxist-Leninist candidate Jamilé Ghaddar was unavailable for comment by press deadline. Ghaddar also ran in the 2006 federal election, receiving 112 votes.

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