Toronto

Trudeau in Toronto to launch climate campaign, challenge Ford government's carbon tax resistance

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will attend a “climate action” rally in Toronto Monday evening as part of a campaign to shift focus away from the ongoing SNC-Lavalin affair.

A family of 4 will receive more than $300 this year under new climate payment

People across Ontario will hear Justin Trudeau's voice Tuesday morning in a new radio ad that calls out the province's resistance to climate change action. (CBC)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will attend a "climate action" rally in Toronto Monday evening as part of a campaign to pressure the Ford government and shift focus away from the ongoing SNC-Lavalin affair.

At the event, which begins at 7:15 p.m. at the Danforth Music Hall, Trudeau is expected to discuss what the Liberal government calls its "strong plan to fight climate change while growing our economy."

He will deliver the speech just hours before the Liberals release their first election-year ads on Tuesday morning.

The climate-focused ads will run in four provinces where the federal government is imposing a carbon tax after provincial conservative governments refused to levy their own price on carbon: Ontario, New Brunswick, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.

"Climate change is a real and serious problem," Trudeau says in the ads.

"We have a strong plan to fight it, one that leading scientists and economists support. It makes polluters pay and gives the money back to people."

In a jab at the federal Conservatives and their provincial cousins, Trudeau concludes: "Now, some politicians want to go back to the Harper years when pollution was free. We have to do better than that. Our kids are counting on us."

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has warned that Ottawa's carbon tax could lead to a recession. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

According to the ads, an average family of four will receive more than $600 this year in Saskatchewan, more than $300 in Ontario and Manitoba and more than $250 in New Brunswick.

Trudeau's trip to the GTA will also include a visit with a family in Mississauga to discuss the Climate Action Incentive payment available in the four provinces.

Ontario's Progressive Conservative government has argued that Ottawa's carbon tax is unconstitutional and is currently challenging the plan in court.

Premier Doug Ford has also warned that a carbon tax could spark a recession, though that claim has been questioned.

Liberal party spokesman Braeden Caley says the rally and the radio ads have been planned for months — long before the SNC-Lavalin affair engulfed Trudeau's government this month with allegations of political interference in the justice system.

With files from The Canadian Press