![Freeland would ditch consumer carbon tax if chosen leader: source](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7428564.1736542436!/cpImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_1180/liberal-caucus-20250108.jpg?im=Resize%3D620)
Freeland would ditch consumer carbon tax if chosen leader: source
CBC
Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland would drop the consumer carbon tax — one of the Liberal government's signature environmental policies — if elected leader, said a source close to her campaign.
The source, who was not authorized to speak publicly, told CBC News the former deputy prime minister will "make difficult decisions to meet our emissions targets and make sure big polluters pay for their outsized emissions."
But the source said Freeland "will not fight Canadians on a policy they have been clear they do not support."
"Freeland will replace the consumer carbon price with a system that will work within our federation and will be developed collaboratively with provinces and territories," said the source.
The news was first reported by CTV News.
Freeland has not yet formally declared her intentions to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, but a source on her campaign said she will officially launch her campaign Sunday in her Toronto riding, University-Rosedale.
Posting to social media Wednesday, Freeland said she will "have much more to say very soon!"
As a prominent Liberal who held multiple high-profile cabinet positions over the last nine years, Freeland is widely considered to be one of the heavyweights in the race to be the next Liberal leader on March 9. The winner would become prime minister.
The race's other perceived front-runner, former central banker Mark Carney, has been coy about his plans for the carbon tax.
Appearing on the The Daily Show earlier this week, Carney was asked by host Jon Stewart if being left the "carbon tax bag" would make running against Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre harder in a general election.
Carney, who is officially launching his campaign in Edmonton on Thursday, said Canada is "doing our bit, making our companies more competitive.
"But we need to do it in a way that Canadians today are not paying the price," he said, without defending the carbon tax or pledging to keep the policy.
"The vast majority of our emissions in Canada come from our industry," Carney added. "In fact, almost 30 per cent of our emissions in Canada come from the production and shipment of oil to the United States."
Part of tackling climate change in Canada is "cleaning that up, getting those emissions down, more than changing, in a very short period of time, the way Canadians live," Carney said.