So one of the PC parties long standing promises is to ditch the Long Gun Registry, which covers things like rifles and shotguns. Restricted weapons (handguns/some longarms) would be unaffected. Not surprisingly, the Liberals voted (apparently in a whipped vote) to keep it, along with the NDP, keeping it by two votes.The owner of a large gun shop in New Brunswick is disappointed a private member's bill to scrap the long-gun registry was defeated on Wednesday.
A Conservative motion to kill the 15-year-old federal program failed when the New Democrats joined the Liberals and the Bloc Québécois. The bill was defeated 153 to 151.
Ross Faulkner, the owner of the Gun Dealer in McAdam, said he's disappointed with the vote's outcome but he doesn't believe it will halt the debate over the gun registry.
"We will go on and certainly carry on and hope that the Conservatives get a majority government and that this firearms registry goes away," Faulkner said.
Faulkner admits as a gun seller he has a vested interest in the matter.
But he also said the registry is not working, and the millions of dollars it costs would be better spent on health and education.
The Wednesday evening vote was a marked difference from the vote last fall on the gun registry, when eight Liberal MPs supported Tory MP Candice Hoeppner's bill, along with 12 New Democrats.
This time all of the Liberal MPs voted against the motion, while six NDP MPs sided with the Tories.
Supporters of the long-gun registry — including police officers, doctors, women's groups and victims-rights groups — had been vocal over the past few weeks in urging MPs to save the contentious program.
Opponents, including farmers and hunters, also made passionate arguments. They argued, among other things, that the registry is ineffective and a waste of money.
The federal firearms centre is headquartered in Miramichi, N.B.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper stopped in Miramichi in August to announce 550 jobs would be located in the northern New Brunswick city to house a new federal payroll centre.
Harper reaffirmed a long-standing promise that his government would replace any jobs in Miramichi that were lost if the gun registry was shut down.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/ ... z10O4ASbzQ
Now I don't oppose the registry, though I do oppose the massive cost over-runs and poorly thought out amnesty system. I'm honestly not sure whether we should keep it, or ditch it. The system is already in place and paid for, though theres no way of forcing people to register guns they had before it took place. It doesn't cost much in time to register either, I bought a shotgun this week and was in and out in 30 minutes.
But regardless, an interesting look at Canuck gun politics for our Southern neighbours.
Edit: Spelling