Westman MPs celebrate changes to guns bill

Liberals withdraw controversial amendment

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The federal Liberals withdrew an amendment to their guns bill on Friday that had introduced a controversial new definition of an assault-style weapon.

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This article was published 02/02/2023 (419 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

The federal Liberals withdrew an amendment to their guns bill on Friday that had introduced a controversial new definition of an assault-style weapon.

On behalf of the government, Vancouver MP Taleeb Noormohamed asked for and received unanimous consent to withdraw the amendment to Bill C-21 at the House of Commons public safety committee Friday morning.

The amendment introduced a new definition of an “assault-style” gun that includes semi-automatic rifles and shotguns with a capacity of more than five cartridges.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said in a written statement posted to Twitter that the government has committed to coming up with

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said in a written statement posted to Twitter that the government has committed to coming up with "a clear, standard definition of what constitutes an assault-style firearm." (The Canadian Press)

Gun control group PolySeSouvient welcomed the amendment as “another critical step toward a comprehensive and permanent ban on assault-style weapons.”

But it caused an outcry in many parts of rural Canada, as hunters argued it criminalized weapons they often use legally for hunting.

The Liberals were also under pressure from many of their own MPs to change or withdraw the new definition of weapons being banned.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said in a written statement posted to Twitter that the government has committed to coming up with “a clear, standard definition of what constitutes an assault-style firearm.”

That was what they tried to do with the amendment, but he said “there have been legitimate concerns raised about the need for more consultation and debate on this vital part of the bill.”

He travelled the country in recent weeks to meet with concerned Canadians. He also went bison hunting last month with members of the Yukon Fish and Game Association, although he never used or even held a gun.

“We hear those concerns loud and clear, regret the confusion that this process has caused and are committed to a thoughtful and respectful conversation that is based on facts, not fear,” he said.

“This is an emotional issue, and Canadians are counting on us to get it right. More discussions, including with Indigenous communities, are crucial.”

He said a new solution to keep assault-style weapons off Canada’s streets is underway.

MPs from all three opposition parties expressed relief that the amendment was withdrawn, though the Liberals were still under heavy criticism for trying to push it through in the first place.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre held a press conference outside the House of Commons, where he declared his party’s efforts to be the sole reason the Liberals withdrew the amendment.

Both of Brandon’s Conservative MPs celebrated the move in phone interviews with the Sun on Friday.

“It’s basically a pause on the Liberals’ attack on law-abiding hunters and farmers that use hunting rifles across this country,” Dauphin-Swan River-Neepawa MP Dan Mazier said. “It’s attacking the rural way of life for many of us. We need these firearms, they’re tools of our occupations and where we live.”

Before becoming an MP, Mazier was a longtime farmer.

His colleague in Brandon-Souris, Larry Maguire, said he was glad the federal government heard the common sense arguments made by people such as Poilievre and withdrew the amendments.

“These crimes are not being committed by hunters, farmers, Indigenous persons or sport shooters,” Maguire said. “The Liberals are still removing mandatory minimum sentences for gun crimes in Bill C-35 and we think they should withdraw that as well.”

Maguire said should the Liberals earn a majority government in the next federal election, he believed they would try to pass the withdrawn rules again.

Indigenous leaders in Manitoba also expressed relief over the amendments being withdrawn.

Southern Chiefs’ Organization Grand Chief Jerry Daniels said the amendment would have challenged First Nations peoples’ ability to harvest from their traditional territories. He also said a better approach to gun control would be to improve treatment for mental health issues.

“It’s people that are killing people, it’s not guns killing people, you know what I mean?” Daniels said.

Will Goodon, the Manitoba Métis Federation’s minister of housing and property management, said hunting was a way his father put food on the table when he was growing up. Growing up around guns, Goodon said operating them safely was knocked into him from an early age.

“So it’s not like, you know, Métis people aren’t interested in safety,” he said. “We are 1,000 per cent. But we’re also interested in protecting our way of life and culture.”

In May 2020, the Liberal government banned 1,500 models and variants of firearms, including the AR-15 and Ruger Mini-14, through an order-in-council on the grounds they have no place in hunting or sport shooting.

But PolySeSouvient said Canada needed a clear definition of an assault-style firearm in the Criminal Code so bans actually worked to keep them off the street.

The group includes students and graduates of Montreal’s Ecole polytechnique, where a gunman killed 14 women in 1989.

Bill C-21 was introduced last May with multiple changes to the Firearms Act and Criminal Code that would codify the government’s regulated ban on handguns and take away firearms from people considered to be a threat to themselves or others.

The amendment with the new definition of an assault-style weapon was added to the bill at committee at the end of November, after the committee had finished debating the bill and hearing from witnesses.

NDP MP Alistair MacGregor said the amendment “derailed” all other progress on C-21.

“I’ve never seen such a groundswell of opposition come really from everywhere all at once,” he said.

Noormohamed said the Liberals are aware withdrawing the amendment also took out a reference to “ghost guns”, which are untraceable weapons.

The proliferation of 3D printers has seen an explosion in the number of “ghost guns,” creating a new problem for police and the courts.

The government intends to find a way to ensure Bill C-21 still addresses that issue.

» The Canadian Press, with files from Colin Slark and Miranda Leybourne

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