Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservatives plan national campaign against federal electric vehicle mandates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2025 09:47 AM
  • Conservatives plan national campaign against federal electric vehicle mandates

Pierre Poilievre is planning to swap his fight against the carbon tax this fall for a new battle against what he's calling the "Carney tax."

The Conservative leader says his party will launch a national campaign to call on the Liberals to scrap their electric vehicle mandate.

The policy requires 20 per cent of all light-duty vehicles sold in Canada next year must be zero-emission vehicles, rising to 100 per cent by 2035.

Manufacturers that do not meet the target can be hit with a $20,000 penalty, which Poilievre is calling a tax.

The vehicle manufacturing industry says that with U.S. tariffs and the end of government sales incentive programs, it will be impossible to hit the 20 per cent benchmark next year.

Poilievre says the mandates are ideological and the Tories plan to push for their termination through public events and motions in the House of Commons.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

MORE National ARTICLES

Carney maintains positive approval rating despite summer cooldown: poll

Carney maintains positive approval rating despite summer cooldown: poll
The Carney-led Liberal government's approval rating dipped to 50 per cent in the firm's latest polling, down two percentage points compared to mid-July and the lowest level since March.

Carney maintains positive approval rating despite summer cooldown: poll

Man fatally shot by RCMP in Sask. happened after officers encountered group in woods

Man fatally shot by RCMP in Sask. happened after officers encountered group in woods
Police say in a news release that on Friday morning, two RCMP officers encountered five people in a wooded area near the community of Deschambault Lake.

Man fatally shot by RCMP in Sask. happened after officers encountered group in woods

Missing B.C. man survives several days in wilderness by slurping water from ponds

Missing B.C. man survives several days in wilderness by slurping water from ponds
McKinnon said a police helicopter coming from Prince George spotted the man in the afternoon of Aug. 8 in a remote area north of McLeese Lake — nine days after he was first reported missing to RCMP on July 31. 

Missing B.C. man survives several days in wilderness by slurping water from ponds

Smoke from Wesley Ridge fire on Vancouver Island could last for months

Smoke from Wesley Ridge fire on Vancouver Island could last for months
The warning appears in a video that BCWS posted to its Facebook page Sunday as part of a larger update on the Wesley Ridge wildfire.

Smoke from Wesley Ridge fire on Vancouver Island could last for months

Many public servants ran for federal office in the spring — only one of them made it

Many public servants ran for federal office in the spring — only one of them made it
Originally from Montreal, Desrochers worked at Global Affairs Canada for almost 25 years; her first posting was in Haiti. She later worked for about a decade on Canada-U.S. relations and was posted to New York during U.S. President Donald Trump's first mandate.

Many public servants ran for federal office in the spring — only one of them made it

Study maps 'megathrust' quake zone off northern B.C., but risk may be far in future

Study maps 'megathrust' quake zone off northern B.C., but risk may be far in future
The images confirm what appears to be a rare geological occurrence, a subduction zone in its "infancy," the study by U.S. and Canadian researchers shows.

Study maps 'megathrust' quake zone off northern B.C., but risk may be far in future