Again, it's not surprising to me that the Conservatives have spent most of their time asking questions about divestment of someone who is maligning the divestment movement. Young people are using so many tools, whether they are divestment, engagement or activism, and they're trying to use whatever tools they can right now in the face of a climate crisis.
What's also not surprising is the climate neo-denialism. That we don't have to be that ambitious is aligned with folks who don't fully support a woman's right to choose. It's also telling, to me, that the Conservative leader has refused to say whether he would scrap the industrial carbon price.
My question is for Ms. Brandon-Jepp. The federal backstop when it comes to the industrial carbon price is one of the most critical policies that we have. Industrial carbon pricing does the bulk of our emissions reduction. The Pathways Alliance's new head has actually called on the Conservative leader to state his position on the industrial carbon price and whether he'd keep it.
It's wild to me that we're in a position where oil and gas leaders are more climate-friendly than the leader of a political party in Canada. That's wild.
I'm curious to hear your perspective about creating certainty. What does that kind of uncertainty do?