Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Yukon Premier Calls Election, Saying He'll Fight Carbon Tax 'Tooth And Nail'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2016 02:45 PM
    WHITEHORSE — Voters in Yukon will go to the polls on Nov. 7 after a 31-day campaign that is expected to focus on First Nations relations, the economy and a controversial carbon tax on greenhouse gas emissions.
     
    Premier Darrell Pasloski called the election Friday following weeks of unofficial campaigning by all parties in the legislature.
     
    Pasloski made the announcement at a grocery store in Whitehorse, saying he will create jobs and "stand up for our true north."
     
    "I promise to put your families' interests and concerns first, at all times, and I promise to fight the carbon tax tooth and nail," he said.
     
    Pasloski is against the federal government's intention to address climate change by imposing a national carbon tax, saying the North should be exempt because it already has a higher cost of living than the rest of the country.
     
    Next month's election will be the second for Pasloski as premier and leader of the Yukon Party, which held 11 of 19 seats in the legislature at dissolution.
     
    The Opposition New Democratic Party had six seats under leader Liz Hanson while the Liberals led by Sandy Silver had one seat. There was also one Independent.
     
    Hanson rallied her candidates on the city's waterfront and said the Yukon Party has shut out residents.
     
    The election will be a chance for change, she added.
     
    "It's time for a government that understands that Yukon is at a watershed moment, a turning point where we together embrace a vision of a new Yukon," Hanson said.
     
    Silver stood in front of all 19 party candidates, stressing the need to mend relationships with all levels of government.
     
    "The Yukon has gone through a very stressful period of partisanship, of governments and citizens and conflict, of people no longer talking to each other. It's time to put all of that behind us to start pulling together again," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Auditor Targets Include Site C, BC Hydro, Grizzly-Bear Management

    B.C. Auditor Targets Include Site C, BC Hydro, Grizzly-Bear Management
    Carol Bellringer says making public the programs she'll audit is an important part of maintaining transparency with British Columbians.

    B.C. Auditor Targets Include Site C, BC Hydro, Grizzly-Bear Management

    Manitoba Couple Say NHL Wants Them To Pay $400 Ticket For Breast-Feeding Baby

    Manitoba Couple Say NHL Wants Them To Pay $400 Ticket For Breast-Feeding Baby
    Clifford Anderson and Shalyn Meady have already spent $800 on two seats for this year's Heritage Classic.

    Manitoba Couple Say NHL Wants Them To Pay $400 Ticket For Breast-Feeding Baby

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Resigns From BJP

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Resigns From BJP
    "I hereby resign from the party membership of the Bharatiya Janata Party," Sidhu said in a tweet, in which he posted his hand-written letter to BJP national president Amit Shah. 

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Resigns From BJP

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Seeks Input From Indigenous Leaders As Part Of Defence Review

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Seeks Input From Indigenous Leaders As Part Of Defence Review
    Sajjan says getting indigenous perspectives is important as the government looks at changes to the role of the military in a changing world.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Seeks Input From Indigenous Leaders As Part Of Defence Review

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax To Be Self-Declared, Up To 2 Per Cent Of Value

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax To Be Self-Declared, Up To 2 Per Cent Of Value
    Vancouver is proposing to tax homeowners by as much as two per cent of assessed value for units that they declare as vacant.

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax To Be Self-Declared, Up To 2 Per Cent Of Value

    32 More People Charged In B.C. After Seizures Of Drugs, Firearms, Cash

    32 More People Charged In B.C. After Seizures Of Drugs, Firearms, Cash
    The anti-gang agency says the latest arrests add to three others in June and that police conducted numerous traffic stops in the seizure of drugs including cocaine, fentanyl and about $70,000 in cash.

    32 More People Charged In B.C. After Seizures Of Drugs, Firearms, Cash