Well I didn't say I trusted him either. I just said that for the election campaign he has adopted Conservative policies. So at face value, that puts him on par with Poilievre.Yes, he's adopted many of Poilievre's policies, but think about what Carney has said.
Last month, Carney laid out Canada’s required contribution to his climate ambitions: “Canada must invest $2 trillion by 2050 — about $80 billion per year — to become carbon competitive and achieve Net Zero. However, investments in decarbonisation currently run between $10–20 billion annually.” The implication is that another $60-70 billion a year will need to be wrung out of Canadian businesses and consumers, either through direct taxation and government spending or with regulatory browbeating to push Canadians’ savings and investments into global warming initiatives.
How do you think he'll achieve that? Especially since he said he'll cancel the carbon tax? I can't see him suddenly abandoning the climate policies he's been preaching. I don't trust him.
But in my opinion, the similarities stop there.
I trust Poilievre more to keep those campaign promises than I do Carney.
Liberals just want to get re-elected and cling to power so at this point they'll say anything even if it contradicts their policies and ideology that they forced on everyone over the past decade.
Last edited: