As the federal government prepares to expand its gun buyback program nationwide in the coming weeks, gun control groups, lobbyists, and policy experts are questioning whether the low participation in last fall’s pilot program signals challenges for the broader rollout.
Ottawa launched the initial pilot for the buyback program in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, in September 2025, in an effort to “test the program’s processes and systems” before launching it nationwide.
“The pilot was never to test the quantitative aspect of the program,” Anandasangaree said. “It [was] much more to look at the systemic issues that may occur.”
The minister said that despite the low turnout for the pilot program in Cape Breton, he believes Ottawa is “well poised to be able to launch the program in the coming weeks.”

Pushback
Tory Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre has called the buyback program an attempt to take firearms away from “law-abiding” hunters and sports shooters while failing to address illegal firearms most often used in crimes.
National Police Federation president Brian Sauvé, who also attended the committee meeting, said the government’s focus should be on stopping illegal gun smuggling if the aim is to reduce crime in Canada.
Despite the pushback from certain provinces and police forces, Anandasangaree told reporters on Jan. 12 that the plan is still to launch the program across the country in the coming weeks.
“The province of Quebec signed on to the program with the SQ [Sûreté du Québec] just last week. We have the RCMP who [are] ready to do their work. We have a number of other means by which we could collect the firearms that are prohibited,” he said.
Was the Pilot a Success?
The buyback program has drawn criticism from both sides of the debate, including gun-control advocates and gun-rights supporters.Heidi Rathjen, coordinator of PolyRemembers—a gun control group formed after the 1989 École Polytechnique shooting—told The Epoch Times that since the pilot program aimed to ensure the system is effective, it can be called a success.
In terms of the turnout for the pilot program, she said she has concerns about gun lobbyists spreading “disinformation” to discourage gun owners from participating in the buyback and provincial governments from endorsing or contributing to the program.
“The prohibitions in the buyback target a very specific type of weapon, and even once completed, there would still be over, or close to, 20,000 models of firearms that would be available on the market that are legitimate for hunting and target practice,” Rathjen said.

She also noted that gun control groups have been waiting for the launch of the firearms buyback program for nearly six years, as the measures were initially announced under the Trudeau government in 2020. Rathjen said the program was expected to be completed by 2022 at the time, and it was again promised in the last election by Prime Minister Mark Carney.
She also said “one glaring flaw” with the buyback program is that it does not include the SKS firearm. Rathjen also said Canada needs to tighten its limits on magazine size, especially for long guns, to weaken the capability of shooting many people rapidly.
Meanwhile, Tracey Wilson, vice president for public relations at gun advocacy group Canadian Coalition of Firearm Rights, told The Epoch Times that in her view the buyback program is “failing.” She said collecting only 25 firearms in the pilot is “beyond pathetic and clarifies why they took so long to come forward with the numbers.”
She also said she doesn’t expect many Canadians will come forward to turn in their firearms when the program is rolled out nationally, noting that participants are not “guaranteed” compensation.
“Carney needs to listen to law enforcement, take control of the situation now, scrap this gun grab entirely and regain some credibility on the public safety file by refocusing his efforts and resources on crime, violence and gun smuggling,” Wilson said.
‘Serious Messaging Errors’
Noah Schwartz, assistant political science professor at the University of the Fraser Valley and firearms policy researcher, told The Epoch Times on Jan. 13 that he suspects the buyback program will have a low turnout like the pilot did, due to resistance from the Western provinces, “messaging failures” by the Liberal government, and “a lack of trust” in the government from Canada’s community of licensed gun owners.“A low turnout is worse than no ban and buyback at all, as the now valueless firearms could be more likely to end up on the grey or black market,” Schwartz said.
Schwartz said that the government has made “serious messaging errors” regarding the program that have eroded public trust, including when Anandasangaree was caught on tape admitting the program is “politically motivated.”
Additionally, the government has “quietly expanded” the list of banned firearms since 2020, meaning many gun owners may not know they own a prohibited firearm, Schwartz noted.
He said Ottawa’s failure to carry out the program in a “timely manner” has also given time for the program to be exposed to scrutiny. Australia and New Zealand’s buyback programs were carried out within two years from their initial announcement, he added.

Schwartz said his research has indicated it is unlikely a firearms ban or buyback will “meaningfully improve public safety” as most crime in Canada is carried out with illegally smuggled firearms from the United States.
“Handguns are generally preferred by criminals over long guns for their portability and concealability. Since handguns have been tightly controlled in Canada for decades, criminals prefer to smuggle handguns from over the border,” he said.
He also said literature indicates programs like community policy and violence interruption programs “are more cost-effective and achieve better outcomes than gun bans.” Additionally, Schwartz said he has spoken to community workers in his research who said they need “consistent sustained funding to make these programs work.”
Anandasangaree said on Jan. 12 that the issue of gun violence “doesn’t have a simplistic solution,” and the buyback program is “one of several things” the federal government is doing as part of a multi-pronged response to gun violence.







