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NDP Tables Climate Change Plan, Conservatives Criticize Trudeau Ahead Of Debate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2015 01:06 PM
    OTTAWA — Two of the three major political parties tried to score domestic political points on Sunday, one day ahead of a major foreign policy debate by the leaders.
     
    New Democrats released their plan to address climate change, one that would allow provinces to opt out if their efforts to minimize carbon emissions are as good or better than those of the federal government.
     
    Tom Mulcair says the money raised by the federal government through putting a price on carbon would go to the provinces for reinvestment in additional measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
     
    At the same time, the federal Conservatives attempted to pull a one-two political punch on the Liberals, accusing Justin Trudeau of making excuses for criminals and measuring economic growth through deficits.
     
    Veteran cabinet ministers Tony Clement and Julian Fantino held an event in Vaughan, Ont., picking apart comments Trudeau made in a weekend interview with Global Television's The West Block.
     
    Fantino attacked the Liberal proposal to do away with mandatory minimum sentences in a series of tough comments that at times turned into a tirade, where he said criminals don't take advantage of the "great services" in prison for rehabilitation and career offenders who are kept "isolated and insulated" don't reoffend when they are released.

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    Tobacco Companies To Fight Ruling Forcing Them To Make Initial $1-Billion Payout

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    U.S. One Step Closer To Extraditing Accused Chinese Hacker From Canada

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    Appeal Court Won't Order New Trial For Calgary Woman Who Put Newborns In Garbage

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    Ontario Fur Farmers Rattled After Thousands Of Mink Let Out During Two Break-ins

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    Soldiers In Bright- Orange Coveralls Fight Fires In Northern Saskatchewan

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    MONTREAL LAKE, Sask. — Soldiers are digging up hot spots and plowing through dense brush and blackened trees as they continue to protect the remote Saskatchewan community of Montreal Lake.

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