Join MP Jenny Kwan's Fight to Stop Canadian Weapons from Fuelling War

Canada must close the loopholes that let our arms end up in the hands of human rights abusers.

Jenny Kwan is closing Canada’s “arms embargo loophole” that allows Canadian arms to flow through the US without accountability. Currently, Canadian weapons can reach global conflicts, contributing to human rights abuses despite international law.

Her Private Member’s Bill strengthens monitoring and disclosure standards to prevent Canadian arms from being used in war crimes or harming civilians. This legislation reflects Canada’s commitment to peace, justice, and human rights, including situations of impunity such as in Gaza being perpetrated by Israel.

✍️ Sign the Parliamentary Petition →

Canada Must Not Be Complicit in War and Repression

Right now, loopholes in Canada’s arms export laws allow Canadian-made weapons and components to end up in the hands of governments accused of war crimes and human rights abuses.

That’s wrong.

On September 19th, Jenny introduced a Private Member’s Bill in Parliament to close these dangerous loopholes and make sure Canadian weapons are never used to harm civilians or fuel repression abroad. There will be a vote in Parliament in February 2026. We need your help to mobilize your friends and neighbours!

The Problem

When Canada joined the Arms Trade Treaty in 2019, it left out one big exception — exports to the United States.

The U.S. is the largest buyer of Canadian military goods. Once there, those Canadian-made parts can be built into weapons systems and shipped to countries accused of bombing civilians or violating human rights — with no transparency, no accountability, and no oversight.

Reports from Amnesty International and Arms Embargo Now have shown that Canadian components have been used in conflicts like Gaza and Yemen.

This must stop.

What Jenny’s Bill Will Do

✅ Apply export controls to all arms, parts, and technology — no exceptions.
 Remove exemptions for the U.S. and other countries.
 Ban blanket export permits for weapons and munitions.
 Require end-use certificates to prevent diversion to human rights abusers.
 Mandate annual public reports to Parliament on Canada’s compliance with the Arms Trade Treaty.

Jenny's Private Member's Bill is Supported By:

Oxfam Canada, Canadians for a Just Peace in the Middle East, Independent Jewish Voices, National Council of Canadian Muslims, and the Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council — all standing together for peace, accountability, and human rights.

 

Latest Update

Funded entirely by the U.S. military, the expansion would dramatically increase the plant’s production capacity for artillery propellant used in 155 mm shells from roughly six million pounds to as much as 16 million pounds annually.

The proposed increase comes amid growing scrutiny of how Canadian-based defence manufacturing feeds into U.S. procurement systems and the extent to which those supply chains are later connected to conflicts abroad, including Israel’s war in Gaza.

Since the October 2025 ceasefire, more than 750 Palestinians have been killed in the Gaza Strip, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Canada has required permits for military exports under the Export and Import Permits Act since 1947, but transfers to the United States have long been treated differently because of the two countries’ deeply integrated defence industries.

*Click image or link to read the article - https://therover.ca/quebec-munitions-expansion-raises-questions-over-supply-chains-linked-to-the-idf/

OTTAWA - Former senior Liberal cabinet ministers say they have "deep concern" about the federal government's decision not to pass legislation aiming to close what they consider a regulatory gap in arms exports.

Former Liberal foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy and former justice minister and ambassador to the United Nations Allan Rock recently wrote a letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand urging more stringent rules and safeguards.

Legislation introduced by NDP MP Jenny Kwan sought to change rules that allow Washington to send Canadian arms to countries that would otherwise be blocked. The private member's bill she tabled in September followed attempts by Washington to purchase Canadian weapons for Israel, despite a Canadian ban on exports of various types of weapons to that country.

Click image or link to read the full news story - https://www.thecanadianpressnews.ca/business/axworthy-rock-call-on-foreign-affairs-minister-to-do-more-to-safeguard-arms-exports/article_f54b04dc-eb0d-5b3d-9def-4e4c203b0b9a.html

Financial institutions have backed multiple companies that have major contracts with ICE to provide equipment or services, through investments, loans and bonds totalling about US$35 billion, according to an investigation by non-profit Stand.earth.

OTTAWA - Major Canadian banks and pension funds provided tens of billions of dollars to American contractors for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, an investigation by the non-profit Stand.earth has found.

The group's analysis of loan and share data found Canadian financial institutions backed multiple companies that have major contracts with ICE to provide equipment or services, through investments, loans and bonds totalling about US$35 billion.

The companies that benefited from those Canadian investments include: data analytics firm Palantir; major U.S. defence contractors General Dynamics and L3Harris; the IT firm CACI; and telecom giant AT&T. CoreCivic and Geo Group, which construct and manage detention centres, also benefited to a lesser extent.

Left-wing politicians reacted sharply to news of the reported transactions. Newly elected NDP Leader Avi Lewis said Canadian businesses and public pensions should not provide support to "Trump‘s personal military arm."

"Canadians are scandalized by ICE, and we've been consistent as a party across this country that we don’t think that Canadian businesses should be doing business with ICE," Lewis told a news conference Monday in Winnipeg. "We certainly don’t think Canadian pension funds should be investing in the infrastructure of repression in the United States."

NDP MP Jenny Kwan said the Stand.earth report demonstrates the need for "greater transparency and accountability" and a "reassessment" of the ethical frameworks guiding public pensions and financial institutions.

Click image or link to read the news story - https://www.thecanadianpressnews.ca/politics/canadian-banks-pension-funds-have-poured-billions-into-ice-contractors/article_d023cc80-3127-57ef-9f02-3f16e7667368.html

MPs voted Wednesday to reject a bill that sought to close a loophole in Ottawa’s weapons export regime that allows Washington to send Canadian arms to countries that would otherwise be blocked.

“We are living within a lie with our arms exports,” NDP MP Jenny Kwan said at a Tuesday press conference.

Kwan tabled a private member’s bill last September following attempts by Washington to purchase Canadian weapons for Israel, despite a Canadian ban on exports of various types of weapons to that country.

MPs rejected Bill C-233 in a vote on second reading on Wednesday, with 295 voting against it, and 22 voting in favour. That means the legislation is dead and will not be sent to a committee for study.

Green Leader Elizabeth May voted in favour of the bill, as did all six New Democrats and 15 Liberal MPs — including former minister Steven Guilbeault and recent floor-crosser Lori Idlout.

Kwan said the existing rules need to be overhauled beyond better reporting and argued her legislation should be studied and amended to address any issues that could harm Canadian interests.

“What we have seen instead are attempts to dismiss the bill with arguments that simply do not stand up to scrutiny,” she said.

Click image or link to read the full news story - https://globalnews.ca/news/11726541/canada-arms-exports-loophole-bill-mps-vote/

An NDP private member's bill that would have ended exemptions from Canada's export-control regime for weapons and ammunition destined for the U.S. failed to pass at the House of Commons on Wednesday, though it garnered the support of 15 Liberal MPs who sided against their government.

"One of the nice things in a democracy and especially in our government, we are able to vote our own conscience. So that's what led me to believe that was the right thing to do," said Liberal MP Gurbux Saini, who represents the British Columbia riding of Fleetwood-Port Kells.

Other Liberals who support the bill include Lori Idlout, who freshly crossed the floor from the NDP, and former cabinet minister Steven Guilbeault.

Patrick Weiler, Sameer Zuberi, Fares Al Soud, Sean Casey, Salma Zahid, Chi Nguyen, Greg Fergus, Iqra Khalid, Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, Aslam Rana, Kristina Tesser Derksen and Michael Coteau rounded out the list of Liberals who voted with the NDP.

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May also voted for the bill, and the Conservatives and Bloc Québécois voted against it.

Twenty-three MPs did not vote, including 15 Liberals.

Prior to the vote, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said the government opposed the bill.

"Canada has one of the strongest export-control regimes in the world," she said, "with human rights considerations applied to every single permit issued for military goods.

"The changes proposed in this bill would decimate Canada's defence industry, would weaken Canada's role in NATO and would jeopardize the capabilities of Canadian Armed Forces."

The bill's sponsor, NDP MP Jenny Kwan, challenged the government by pointing out how two former Liberal cabinet ministers, Allan Rock and Lloyd Axworthy, had recently come out in favour of her legislation.

"They said Parliament now faces a clear choice: maintain an outdated exemption that undermines Canada's credibility or adopt a modern, principled statement, that reflects our commitments and responsibilities," Kwan said.

"Will the prime minister be honest with reality and votes yes to Bill C-233?"

Click image or link to read the full news story - https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/ndp-bill-loopholes-arms-exports-9.7124756

When the NDP's arms-control bill that seeks to end largely permit-free Canadian military exports to the U.S. is put to a vote on Wednesday, it could garner the support of more than a dozen Liberal MPs.

That would be the first time some in the Liberal caucus split from the government's position on legislation under Prime Minister Mark Carney.

"By my count, so far, I think there may be somewhere between … nine to 16 Liberal members who may support the bill," said the NDP's Jenny Kwan, the bill's main sponsor, at a news conference on Tuesday.

Two Liberal MPs who spoke to CBC News on condition they not be named, citing the confidentiality of caucus discussions, confirm that range is accurate.

Up to now, four Liberals have publicly supported Bill C-233, which the NDP calls the No More Loopholes Act.

The legislation would impose export controls on arms and munitions that are sent to the U.S., similarly to mechanisms that exist for most other countries.

Click image or link to read the news story - https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/liberals-support-ndp-arms-control-9.7122738

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