By Mark Taliano
I’d be more inclined to vote for the Green Party Of Canada if they’d simply change their name.
The million or so supporters of the party don’t seem to mind, but the name evokes connotations of hippies and Flower Power, or some kind of marginalized movement, and the Party is substantively quite different.
Its philosophical basis of environmental stewardship means it is opposed to subsidies for the fossil fuel industry and the nuclear industry on the basis that such incentives are counter-productive to a balanced and sustainable economy that serves the public well being. Translation? They’re concerned about long-term public welfare rather than short-term corporate profits. The party sees what science sees, which is that if we don’t transition right now to non-carbon and non-nuclear sources for our energy needs, then we’re making a catastrophic blunder. (The Japanese nuclear catastrophe should be enough of an incentive to move away from nuclear, and, by extension, carbon fuels, but some federal parties don’t share that opinion.)
Aligning themselves with this mandate, then, are Green Party policies which include their opposition to further corporate taxes cuts, but also initiatives such as their opposition to increases in E.I premiums.
Monies generated from these policies would help make alternate energy sources mainstream, create countless jobs and industries, and render the economy and the environment more sustainable.
Green Party voices deserve a spot at the televised leaders’ debates, and they deserve a spot in the House of Commons. We owe it to ourselves, and to our democracy.
Maybe they’ll even change their name to something more suitable. How about The Progressive Party Of Sustainable Growth?
Mark Taliano is a Niagara resident and frequent contributor to Niagara At Large.
(Share your comments below on the decision by a “consortium” of broadcasters to exclude Green Party leader Elizabeth May from the federal leadership debates to be televised later this month and visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary on matters of interest and concern to residents in our greater Niagara region and beyond.)

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