PM appeals to Ont. hunters, anglers to help scrap gun registry
Registry an example of flawed Liberal approach to criminal justice: Harper
Last Updated: Sunday, March 22, 2009 | 6:36 PM ET
The Canadian Press
Prime Minister Stephen Harper waves to the crowd following his speech Saturday at the annual general meeting of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters in Mississauga. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)Prime Minister Stephen Harper set his sights on the federal long gun registry Saturday, asking a meeting of recreational sportsmen to help him build enough support in Parliament to scrap the registry.
Harper urged members of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters to contact opposition MPs and pressure them to support legislation that would target the six-year-old program.
"We are looking to unite a majority of MPs in repealing the long gun registry," Harper told the group in a speech in Mississauga, west of Toronto.
"The leaders of the opposition parties continue to be against this. But there are MPs in all these parties that know what we know, that law-abiding hunters and farmers are not part of the crime problem."
"I challenge you to press these MPs to follow their consciences."
In its entire lifetime, Harper's minority government has never brought a bill to abolish the registry to a vote, fearing there would not be enough support in the House of Commons.
Instead, the Tories have reduced the registry's budget and brought in fee waivers and amnesty for gun owners who haven't registered.
"[The registry] really should be abolished. He's absolutely correct," said Frank DiRocco, an avid hunter and angler from Woodbridge, Ont., who was attending the federation's 81st annual general meeting where Harper spoke.
"Hunters are not the ones on the streets breaking the law — they're enjoying the sport and the country," he said, adding he wants to teach his 12-year-old son to understand nature and respect the nation's resources, but feels the registry makes this very difficult.
Jim Magee, a cattle farmer from Drumbo, Ont., near Woodstock, called the registry "aggravation."
He said wild animals, like coyotes, will sometimes kill his livestock.
"As soon as I get my gun out and get my ammunition that's locked away, the coyote is a mile away," Magee said, who is also a former police officer.
"But if I keep [my gun] out and it gets stolen, I'm in trouble."
'A bloated bureaucratic nightmare'
The registry was brought in by a previous Liberal government and has been constantly derided by the Conservatives for being a source of cost overruns and unnecessary red tape.
Harper told those gathered the registry was a prime example of how the previous government's approach to criminal justice was flawed.
"Instead of action on crime, we got the federal long gun registry, which became a bloated bureaucratic nightmare to responsible hunters, farmers and rural Canadians," he said.
"It cost taxpayers some $2 billion and it hasn't done a thing to reduce gun crime."
Magee said he was upset when the long gun registry was put in place for that very reason.
"It was a useless exercise to appease an urban population," he said.
"I don't have a problem with reasonable precautions — safe storage, and having an acquisition licence."
Harper received applause as he told the group Ottawa is reviewing the federation's "positive" proposal for legislation that recognizes Canada's recreational hunting and angling heritage and enshrines their rights and responsibilities.
Harper made his comments as Vancouver has seen a recent surge in gang-related firearm murders, although he never touched on the issue in his Saturday speech.
"[The registry cost is] huge money that could have been used in a lot of other areas instead of a falsehood — letting people believe it's going to solve crime," said Todd Orton, from Midland, Ont.
"That's not what the records are showing."
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