The shockwave of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s decision to get behind a new pipeline connecting Alberta’s oil sands to the sweet, whale-infested West Coast tidewater continues to reverberate among several dozen people in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec City. One of them is now-former heritage minister Steven Guilbeault, who resigned from cabinet over it. He alleged the pipeline would have “major environmental impacts,” that there had been “no consultation” with the First Nations affected, and that Carney’s willingness to exempt Alberta from clean-energy regulations was a “serious mistake.”

And then on Thursday, Canadians learned two things: One, that we have something called a Net-Zero Advisory Body; and two, that two members of said body had also resigned in protest over Alberta’s gh

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