Conservative platform promises tax cuts, farmland protection

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Published: April 22, 2025

Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre speaks during an election campaign stop at the Fruiticana grocery store in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada April 20, 2025.

The Conservative Party of Canada is promising to cut taxes affecting farmers and create a farmland protection plan in its federal party platform, released Tuesday morning.

The policies laid out by the Tories include a plan to “scrap the capital gains tax hike and axe the tax on reinvestment in Canada” as well as to eliminate all carbon pricing “on everything, for everyone, for good.”

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The Liberal party has also promised to scrap an increase to the capital gains inclusion rate and the consumer carbon price, but not carbon penalties for industrial emitters.

Also on the Conservatives’ cutting board is the planned food packaging tax on fresh produce.

The plan also promises the launch of a “tax reform tax force” within 60 days of forming government, “made up of farmers, builders, entrepreneurs, economists and workers.”

As part of the plan to “End Foreign Influence and Economic Dependence,” the Conservatives are promising to pass a Farmland Protection act. Per the policy plan, this will help to prevent foreign governments from buying up Canadian farmland. It will also report on how much farmland is already owned by foreign governments and corporations.

The Conservatives also plan to maintain tariffs on strategic Chinese imports.

About the author

Jonah Grignon

Jonah Grignon

Reporter

Jonah Grignon is a reporter with GFM based in Ottawa, where he covers federal politics in agriculture. Jonah graduated from Carleton University’s school of journalism in 2024 and started working full-time with GFM in Fall 2024, after starting as an intern in 2023. Jonah has written for publications like The Hill Times, Maisonneuve and Canada’s History. He has also created podcasts for Carleton’s student newspaper The Charlatan, Canada’s History and Farm Radio International in Ghana.

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