Supposedly Illinois. Most likely a scare tactic, but I'm going to buy a lower with my next paycheck. So, it worked?
A spokesman for Michael Madigan, Democratic speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, said the new General Assembly could take up new gun restriction laws again after being seated in the new year.
I predict a few things get passed in the coming years, based on the last few legislative sessions:
Deerfield banned assault weapons, even though there's already a ban in Cook County. They will probably push this statewide and tweak the language to include firearms that are common and weak. At one point they proposed anything that is capable of holding more than 10 rounds in a detachable magazine, was going to be considered an AW.
Ammo Tax statewide (already introduced). They are currently proposing a penny per round, funds will go into a Mental Health fund. Cook County currently has an ammo tax, so Cook County residents will have to pay even more. The Cook ammo tax has been in effect since 2016, no report yet on how the money is being used and if it is effective or not.
Gun Dealer Licensing will pass. Rauner vetoed it, they didn't have enough votes to override him. JBP said he will sign it. This bill started off as a huge pile of poop (one year there were 9 amendments) and when Rauner vetoed it, they made it into a polished turd. At one point, they were going to force gun shops/ranges to put video surveillance in bathrooms. And the license fee was undetermined. The department (IL Dept Of Financial & Professional Regulation) raised concerns on this bill. It will require whole new staffing, training, funding, etc.
FOID/CCL: Require finger prints for all applicants/renewals.
Private Sales no longer a thing and require the seller to get a license (Federal and State) or sell through an FFL. Right now you can sell to any FOID holder, running a background check through ISP and ISP provides you with an approval number.
Gun parts, they will probably try to make buying individual parts that are not OEM, illegal. They tried to make any trigger modifications illegal last year, but failed by a few votes. This might tie in with a ghost gun bill of some sort, preventing you from being able to assemble your own firearm (no more kits).