Advocates for the Second Amendment in Connecticut are raising concerns over a proposed bill they believe could restrict options for self-defense. They fear that this move by Democrats may pave the way for further restrictions on firearms.
The legislation, put forward by Connecticut Democrats, aims to ban a majority of Glock-style pistols that have the potential to be modified into machine guns. The focus is on any semi-automatic pistol featuring a cruciform trigger bar, which can be easily altered with basic tools to accommodate a conversion device, thus enabling automatic firing.
Holly Sullivan, the President of the Connecticut Citizens Defense League, expressed to Fox News Digital that the state’s Democrats have opted to target law-abiding citizens with this legislation instead of focusing on criminals.
Semi-automatic handguns are showcased at a gun shop in New Castle, Pennsylvania, on March 25, 2020. (Keith Srakocic/AP)
Sullivan remarked, “The focus is not on apprehending criminals violating the law. Instead, they’re targeting law-abiding Americans who own commonly used handguns. Rather than addressing the criminal aspects, they’re opting to restrict one of the nation’s most popular handgun types.”
She further criticized, “While Connecticut prides itself on having some of the toughest gun laws in the nation, there seems to be a lack of effectiveness in addressing those who actually violate these laws.”
A machine gun conversion device for a Glock handgun can convert the firearm into a machine gun after the switch is installed. The device can be made with a 3-D printer. (John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe/Getty Images)
Sullivan said she’s concerned Democrats won’t stop with banning most Glock-style pistols, and will go even further.
“For anybody who doesn’t live in a deep blue state like this, I hope the message is resonated that they’re never satisfied, whether they come for the rifles or they come for the Glocks, what is after that, we don’t know.” Sullivan said. “They don’t want their constituents to have firearms and they don’t how to deal with the criminals that are misusing them.“
The bill was raised by Democrats Wednesday morning within the 3 a.m. hour, and passed shortly after, according to News 8. Democrat Cathy Osten was the only member of her party who joined Republicans in their attempt to block the bill.
NRA-ILA Executive Director John Commerford told Fox News Digital that the bill creates “barriers to their right to self-defense.”
“And all it does is reduces the options that law-abiding gun owners have to protect themselves and their families. As we know, when seconds count, the police are minutes away. So taking away self-defense options for law-abiding residents of Connecticut is never the answer. The answer is holding criminals accountable for their actions, prosecuting them, and making sure they stay behind bars when they have been convicted,” Commerford said.
Proponents of the bill claim its aim is to close loopholes that allow Glock-style pistols to be converted into machine guns.

Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont speaks at a COVID-19 community vaccination clinic in Stamford, Conn., on March 14, 2021. (John Moore/Getty Images)
“The legislation is keeping up with the technology and as the technology evolves, this law is going to cover that for closing a lot of loopholes, for ghost guns, as well as keeping machine guns off our streets,” Earl Bloodworth with Connecticut Against Gun Violence told WFSB. “Every time a ‘switch’ turns a handgun into a machine gun, the heartbeat of a community quickens with fear. For too long, we have watched technology outpace our laws while families pay the price in grief and trauma that never truly heals.”
In a statement to Fox News Digital, Chris Stone, director of State and Local Affairs for Gun Owners of America, said the bill “does nothing to stop criminals, who already illegally possess machine guns and conversion devices in violation of federal law.”
“Instead, it punishes law-abiding manufacturers, retailers, and Connecticut gun owners by targeting firearms in common use for self-defense, precisely the type of arms protected by the Second Amendment,” he said.
The bill is now headed to Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont’s desk and will go into law if he signs it.
Fox News Digital reached out to Lamont’s office and Glock for comment.
















