About 1% of Canadian Voters Own a Handgun, Globe Reports

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TheGunBlog.ca — About 1 percent of Canadian voters legally own a so-called “Restricted” or “Prohibited” firearm such as a handgun or AR-15 rifle, according to calculations by TheGunBlog.ca based on a report today by the Globe and Mail.

Only 293,000 men and women owned at least one “Restricted” or “Prohibited” gun in September out of 2.2 million people with a firearm Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL), the Globe said on its website, citing the Ottawa-based Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Bans for Votes

The relatively small number may encourage the governing Liberal Party to push through the new prohibitions it’s considering on civilian handgun ownership.

The party could conclude the promise of bans will attract enough of Canada’s roughly 27 million voters to win next year’s election.

Polls show Liberal voters are hostile to lawful gun owners and overwhelmingly favour eliminating them from cities.

Read: About 90% of Liberals Support Gun Ban in Cities, Ekos Chief Says

More Canadian Than Hockey

Hunting is at the heart of Canadian heritage and target shooting is one of the country’s safest and most-popular sports. More men and women have a firearm licence than play golf, hockey, soccer or who ski.

Many gun owners vote Liberal in the hope they’ll be exempted from future prohibitions.

The total gun-licence holders include 640,000 people with a “Restricted” PAL, the Globe and Mail said, citing the RCMP. That compares with 593,000 at the end of June.

Read: Gun Licences Rise to Record in June After 21 Quarterly Increases

The federal police manage licensing and daily background checks of gun owners, and record the details of their handgun purchases.

Although a licence is required to buy, sell, own or transport any firearm, millions of unlicensed family and friends of all ages enjoy target shooting under the supervision of permit holders.

Misleading Labels

Individuals, businesses and museums owned about 1 million “Restricted” or “Prohibited” handguns at the end of June and about 105,000 “Restricted” or “Prohibited” rifles and shotguns, TheGunBlog.ca has reported. Estimates suggest they also owned more than 9 million “Non-restricted” rifles and shotguns. Some people say the number is twice that.

Read: Handgun, Semi-Auto Ban Could Wipe Out $2 Billion From Gun Owners

Canada’s legal labels for gun classifications are misleading because all lawful gun owners and all their guns are tightly restricted. Guns labelled “Prohibited” are legal to own for the 50,000 people with the right paperwork.

Licence = Temporary Waiver

All firearms are banned for everyone under threat of prison unless they have a licence authorized by the federal police as a temporary waiver. Handguns and AR-15 rifles require additional safety courses, tests and police permissions.

Violent gangs and criminals smuggle most of their weapons from the U.S. Some illegally buy or steal them from individual owners, police or stores in Canada. They don’t ask the police for authorizations to transport or use their pistols.

‘Untapped Opportunity’

The Liberals are preparing new prohibitions under Bill C-71 and examining a “full ban” on handguns and many other firearms owned by licensed men and women.

A public-relations firm that advises the government said in March that new restrictions present an “untapped opportunity” for the Liberals to win more votes and strengthen their control of parliament in the next election.

Gun Bans Ahead?

“I’m looking at all of the ways in which we can interdict the supply of guns into the criminal world, and focusing on the border and the border alone would, in my opinion, only be doing half the job,” Bill Blair, the crime minister in charge of examining new bans, was quoted as telling the Globe and Mail in an interview in today’s article.

The opposition Conservative Party, several provincial premiers and police leaders oppose taking away firearms from legitimate hunters and sport shooters.

“It’s lazy government to ask people who follow the rules to follow more rules,” Andrew Scheer, the Conservative party leader, told the Globe in an interview. “It would be a huge diversion of police resources to go around confiscating the firearms that have been held legally.”


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