Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gas tax holiday not high on Liberals' agenda

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2022 02:04 PM
  • Gas tax holiday not high on Liberals' agenda

OTTAWA - Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says the government is more focused on stabilizing oil prices by increasing supply than it is on trying to cut prices by offering Canadians a temporary reprieve from the federal gas tax.

His comments come as U.S. President Joe Biden is musing about slashing the federal gas tax south of the border, after other measures to curtail rising gas prices haven't worked.

If the Biden administration follows through on that plan, it would make Canada the only remaining G7 country not to have recently cut gas excise taxes or offered a subsidy to help lower pump prices.

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine started pushing global oil prices upwards, the United Kingdom, Italy and Germany all slashed gasoline excise taxes, while France and Japan offered subsidies to consumers and fuel wholesalers, respectively.

Wilkinson says there are no immediate plans for Canada to join them, noting Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's speech on affordability last week pointed instead to scheduled increases in government benefit cheques, cuts to child care costs and increases to the Old Age Security program and the Canada Workers Benefit.

He says a gas tax holiday is not entirely off the table, but the government is currently working domestically and abroad to increase fuel supplies in a bid to bring world oil prices back under control.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man pushed to the ground and punched in the face before boarding a train in New Westminster

Man pushed to the ground and punched in the face before boarding a train in New Westminster
Metro Vancouver Transit Police have taken conduct of the file and are recommending one charge of assault for a 50-year-old man of no fixed address, who is known to police. The suspect was released at the scene with a court appearance scheduled for June 8, 2022.

Man pushed to the ground and punched in the face before boarding a train in New Westminster

COVID tests back up airports as travel takes off

COVID tests back up airports as travel takes off
Travellers who arrive in Canada are subject to random COVID-19 tests and must answer public-health questions on the ArriveCan app. Interim president Monette Pasher says the extra steps mean it takes four times longer to process passengers who come through customs than it did before the COVID-19 pandemic.    

COVID tests back up airports as travel takes off

Telus bulking up reach in B.C., Alberta

Telus bulking up reach in B.C., Alberta
Canada's third-largest telecom company says the investments will be in network infrastructure, operations and spectrum, and will help deliver 5G to remote communities.

Telus bulking up reach in B.C., Alberta

'Circle of care' for neurodiverse kids in B.C.

'Circle of care' for neurodiverse kids in B.C.
The plan is to open 40 so-called family connections centres, or hubs, across the province. Four are slated to provide services under a pilot program from next year — three in northwestern B.C., and another in the central Okanagan.

'Circle of care' for neurodiverse kids in B.C.

Man pleads guilty to killing mother and toddler

Man pleads guilty to killing mother and toddler
Mchale Busch, 24, and her son, Noah McConnell, were found dead in an apartment complex in Hinton, about 250 kilometres west of Edmonton, on Sept. 17, 2021.    

Man pleads guilty to killing mother and toddler

Canada moving on national adaptation strategy

Canada moving on national adaptation strategy
The strategy, which the Liberals have promised will be ready by this fall, is intended to set goals for Canada to adapt its built and natural environment, with deadlines in both 2030 and 2050.

Canada moving on national adaptation strategy