Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Harper cites spectre of long-dead gun registry, fears 'back door' resurrection

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2014 12:43 PM

    SAULT STE MARIE, Ont. - He says he doesn't want to sound paranoid, but Prime Minister Stephen Harper is concerned his own federal bureaucracy is trying to bring back the long gun registry "through the back door."

    Harper courted gun owners and anglers today in northern Ontario with a carefully stage-managed question and answer session with invited representatives of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters.

    Killing the long gun registry was a long-standing Conservative government promise —and fundraising cash cow. Now that it's dead and buried, the governing party is reviving alleged threats of its resurrection.

    The government has loudly denounced and reversed an RCMP move to prohibit a couple of guns police say can too easily be converted into fully automatic weapons.

    Harper cited that example to tell gun owners his government will not tolerate what he called bureaucratic initiatives "effectively trying to put the long gun registry back through the back door."

    Harper did not take questions from journalists after the event.

    The prime minister was to meet with members of his hunting and angling caucus later in the day as parliamentarians wrap up a week-long break from the House of Commons.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jason Kenney Aims To Get Tougher On Temporary Foreign Workers Violators

    Jason Kenney Aims To Get Tougher On Temporary Foreign Workers Violators
    OTTAWA - The federal government is considering lifetime bans and heftier fines on employers found to have violated its new regulations on temporary foreign workers.

    Jason Kenney Aims To Get Tougher On Temporary Foreign Workers Violators

    Rookie Receivers Getting A Chance With BC Lions As Injuries Mount

    Rookie Receivers Getting A Chance With BC Lions As Injuries Mount
    SURREY, B.C. - Stephen Adekolu and Bryan Burnham are close friends off the field, so it's probably fitting their careers have followed similar paths.

    Rookie Receivers Getting A Chance With BC Lions As Injuries Mount

    B.C. Mountie Found Jail Sex Entertaining But He Should Have Intervened: Crown

    B.C. Mountie Found Jail Sex Entertaining But He Should Have Intervened: Crown
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A Mountie who watched two drunk female inmates have sex in a jail cell seemed to consider the entire episode entertaining when he should have been intervening, says a Crown lawyer.

    B.C. Mountie Found Jail Sex Entertaining But He Should Have Intervened: Crown

    Man Accused Of Killing Surrey Teen Worried About Harming Someone

    Man Accused Of Killing Surrey Teen Worried About Harming Someone
    VANCOUVER - Documents show that a man accused of killing a 17-year-old British Columbia girl told a parole board in 2008 that he worried he would harm someone if he was released from prison.

    Man Accused Of Killing Surrey Teen Worried About Harming Someone

    Quebec considering demerit points for drivers who text

    Quebec considering demerit points for drivers who text
    QUEBEC - Quebec's transport minister is considering toughening sanctions against drivers who are caught texting, including hitting them with four demerit points.

    Quebec considering demerit points for drivers who text

    Nortel trial continues for another day; sticking point dividing patent proceeds

    Nortel trial continues for another day; sticking point dividing patent proceeds
    TORONTO - A pivotal trial in the Nortel bankruptcy is continuing for an extra day.

    Nortel trial continues for another day; sticking point dividing patent proceeds