Altair
Army.ca Veteran
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if the liberals do use their nuclear option and shut down any attempt by BC to block kinder Morgan, I wonder if the people writing these articles will give them any praise.Loachman said:I highlighted a name in the last paragraph that I included. I see that as another indicator of the likelihood of continuing Liberal inaction.
http://business.financialpost.com/opinion/terence-corcoran-the-ugly-pipeline-war-is-no-accident-it-was-the-plan
Terence Corcoran: The ugly pipeline war is no accident. It was the plan
The Canadian pipeline crisis is developing along the usual constitutional divide and within the tired context of party politics punditry. Will Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government use its federal powers to overrule the unconstitutional moves by B.C.’s NDP government? Will B.C.’s attempt to block the $7.4-billion expansion of the Trans Mountain oilsands pipeline to the West Coast lead to a trade war with Alberta’s NDP?
And what will the Liberals’ new plans, announced Thursday, to gut the National Energy Board’s power and responsibilities, and new environmental rules released this week to protect the lives of fish against human encroachment by pipeline do to the state of the federation?
Wake up, Canada. This is not another political game show about the powers and rights of different levels of government. Nor is it about ritual inter-party rivalries among Liberals, New Democrats and Conservatives. The Trans Mountain constitutional meltdown is the product of an aggressive radical campaign by green extremists to rip up the Canadian economy.
<mucho snippage>
Among the Canadian green groups cited by Marx as eager recipients of funding were Environmental Defence Canada, World Wildlife Fund Canada, ForestEthics Canada, Greenpeace and others. At the time, in 2008, the head of World Wildlife Fund Canada was Gerald Butts, currently Prime Minister Trudeau’s principle secretary and top adviser. Other green activists sit on panels and outside cabinet rooms, providing bad advice and misguidance to politicians and business leaders.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/bc-alberta-pipeline-trans-mountain-expansion-1.4529422
As B.C. looks for a way to fight back, Carr said he and his colleagues working on the issue stand ready to shut the dispute down.
If B.C. makes good on its threat to restrict the bitumen shipments, Ottawa will act "immediately," Carr said.
Carissima Mathen, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, said that the federal government has always held the constitutional right to the final word on pipelines.
"No province is able to intervene in that process and they can't use their own law-making authority to try and create other obstacles or barriers to do that," she said