Trudeau promises more gun control and goes on the attack against Scheer

Truth Tracker: A look at Trudeau's claim that Conservatives are 'in the pocket of the gun lobby'

Faced with questions about a rash of gun violence in some Canadian cities -- most notably in the Toronto area -- Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said his party has a plan to "strengthen gun control" and accused the Conservatives of being “in the pocket of the gun lobby.”

https://election.ctvnews.ca/truth-t...-are-in-the-pocket-of-the-gun-lobby-1.4598132
Have they not figured out yet legal gun owners are not the killers? They could have less legislation by simply having the rifling recorded for each gun. Probably help track them as well.
With an open border it is almost impossible to stop an illegal gun to be smuggled into Canada.

Military type guns, except SKS? Are Canadians that naive that they don't know every gun ever created has been used in the military?
Bows and arrows too.
 
I was looking at those GSG's and thinking I should buy one before they get banned. Guess I missed the boat. I'll have to stick to my 10/22
 
I'm surprised the 10 22 is not on the list ..... I'm sure it will be soon. I always wanted a mini 14 years ago ... always regretted not buying one .... still wish I did ..... it would never get turned in. What a mess.
 
No wonder Canada is $60,000,000,000 in the hole. Can't wait till they start picking away at our pensions.
 
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Liberals’ 3-Year Plan for Gun-Confiscation Spending Suggests They’ve Abandoned October 2025 Deadline​

Canada’s Liberal Party-led administration said today it plans to spend almost $600 million over three years on its failing firearm confiscations, suggesting it has abandoned efforts to complete the forced seizures by October 2025.

The Liberals, who have already wasted about $100 million on their attacks against government-licensed firearm owners and businesses, shared their newest spending plans this evening in their 2024 Fall Economic Statement.

It’s the first time they’ve publicly given a cost estimate for their crackdown since unleashing it in May 2020.
Liberals + RCMP Attacks to Spend $597.9 Million

The Liberals said in the statement:

“The 2024 Fall Economic Statement proposes to provide $597.9 million over three years, starting in 2024-25, to Public Safety Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to safely remove prohibited firearms from communities and fairly compensate assault-style firearms owners.”

The Liberals use the phrases “assault weapons” and “assault-style firearms” to refer to rifles and shotguns they dislike.
They named their confiscation fantasy: “Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program.”
Initially, they had named it “Firearms Buyback Program” when they ordered their mass criminalizations in May 2020.

Deadline Ditched?

The page on the firearm confiscations in today’s economic statement doesn’t mention the current official deadline of 30 October 2025.
The Liberals have delayed their confiscation effort twice already as they struggle to execute their attacks against honest citizens.
Opinion polls show the Liberals will be out of office in next year’s election before the October deadline, almost guaranteeing their confiscation fantasy will fail. The probable incoming Conservative Party-led government has pledged to reverse the bans.

 

Liberals throw $600M more at gun buyback scheme – still no guns collected​

Tucked away in the Liberal government’s fall economic statement is a commitment to throw an additional $597.9 million over three years in taxpayer funds to confiscate guns from law-abiding firearms owners.

The gun buyback scheme was already projected to surpass $100 million by 2025 despite the government not collecting a single gun since the plan’s announcement.

“The government respects and will not infringe upon the rights of lawful gun owners and recognizes the fundamental importance of firearms, such as hunting rifles and shotguns, to the way of life for many rural Canadians, farmers, and Indigenous hunters,” reads the Fall Economic Statement.

However, Tracey Wilson, the vice president of public relations for the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights, told True North that the $600 million over three years proves the Liberals aren’t serious about confiscating firearms from Canadians.

“The projected costs of the ‘buyback’ confiscation program are projected to blow into the billions with the number of guns affected,” said Wilson. “$200M a year indicates they are allocating a trickle of what would be really necessary to carry out a full confiscation.”

She added that she expects the Liberals to continue with willing retailers who’ve been sitting on inventory they can’t sell and are forced to spend money for storage and insurance.

“They’re an easy first target, and the Liberals will tout it as ‘progress,’” she said.

The fall economic statement reiterated that Canada intends to donate any confiscated firearms to Ukraine.

Wilson criticized the idea of donating sporting rifles to Ukraine as “ridiculous” and “entirely performative.”

“I think it’s an attempt to reinforce the notion that these guns are ‘weapons of war.’ No military in the world uses semi-auto, 5-round plinkers in battle,” she said. “Not to mention you can’t export these guns without approval from the countries of origin, most of whom have weapons contracts with Ukraine.”

Most of the weapons used in crimes in Canada continue to be smuggled from the United States. For example, a record firearm bust in Peel consisted of 97% of illegal firearms smuggled across Canada’s southern border.

The Liberals’ most recent update on its long gun ban added 324 firearms to the original list of 1,500 that were banned under Bill C-21 in 2020. The legislation passed through the Senate last year.

Prohibitions on the firearms mean that they can no longer be legally possessed, sold, or imported into Canada and can only be transferred or transported in unique circumstances.

The Liberals said they are working to implement Bill C-21, and the remaining provisions fully will come into effect no later than Jan. 2025.

Prairie Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation Gage Haubrich responded on X to Wilson’s post highlighting the budget lines, adding that the Parliamentary Budget Officer said paying for the guns will cost Canadian taxpayers $756 million.

“This is only the tip of the iceberg for what this expensive and ineffective scheme could end up costing taxpayers,” said Haubrich.

Wilson added that the program was a complete waste of taxpayer funds while taxpayers face tariff threats from President-elect Donald Trump due to Canada’s border issues.

Legal firearm owners were previously granted an amnesty period until Oct. 30, 2025, encompassing the newest models.

Wilson said collecting the more than 650,000 guns from hundreds of thousands of owners across Canada’s massive geographic territory was an impossible task and that the Liberals would extend the amnesty if they remained in office.

The fall economic statement showcased a deficit of $61.9 billion for the 2023-24 fiscal year, which is over 50% higher than the limit Chrystia Freeland previously promised to abide by.

“The Liberals continue to use legal firearms owners and businesses as a punching bag for political gain. They’ve learned absolutely nothing from their tanking polling despite the desperate channel changer of more gun control,” said Wilson.

“The CCFR looks forward to a decision out of the federal court of appeals on the legality of these continued attacks on Canada’s most vetted citizens. We’ll never stop fighting these people. It’s time for a new government.”

 

Liberals’ “amnesty” for banned guns ends this year. Here’s what gun owners need to know​

As the Liberals’ continue to expand the scope of their 2020 order-in-council banning nearly 2,000 models of firearms, this year is an important one for Canadian gun owners.

The ban was introduced in May 2020 when some 1,500 models of firearms became prohibited overnight following an order-in-council the Liberals said was prompted by a mass shooting in Portapique, N.S.

Weeks ago, the Trudeau government announced an additional 324 firearms would be added to the ban, on the eve of the 35th anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre.

The latest additions to the ban also included a newly updated list of parts and components. Included in the scope of the confiscation program are magazines, sights and grips, bolts and a wide array of barrels.

The confiscation scheme requires gun owners to forfeit any of the now prohibited guns and the parts to the government by October 2025 as part of a “buyback” program which hasn’t yet been finalized.

“If you possess a newly prohibited firearm it must be securely stored in accordance with the storage requirements for that classification of firearm prior to prohibition,” reads a statement from Public Safety Canada.

While the government is finally moving on its confiscation program for firearm businesses – many of whom have been saddled with immovable inventory since the order-in-council four and a half years ago – there is no timeline for individual gun owners to have to forfeit their property, even with the end of the amnesty period just 10 months away.

“An individual can only transport the newly prohibited firearm under the following circumstances,” the statement continues, “returning it to a police officer without compensation; deactivating by an approved business; if not the owner, returning it to the owner; if the owner, but the firearm is not at home, returning the firearm home; legally exporting the firearm; and, if a business, returning the firearm to the manufacturer.”

The statement went on to say that individuals should not “deliver a firearm to a police station without first making arrangements with a police officer” to ensure a safe delivery or pick up.

Additionally, individuals are prohibited from any and all options to grandfather these firearms to someone else.

If one finds themselves travelling outside of Canada with a newly prohibited firearm, they must declare it upon their return so it can be intercepted by border authorities.

“The individual will be given the option of exporting or abandoning the firearm to the Crown,” reads the statement.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has vowed to reverse the ban, however, should his party be elected to government before amnesty runs out.

 
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