Politicians and celebrities from Canada and around the world have been reacting to the two mass shootings in the U.S., with some calling out the powerful U.S. gun lobby and urging stronger gun control.

Over the weekend, two mass shooters carried out violent massacres in Ohio and Texas, which combined left 30 people dead and about 49 injured in less than 24 hours.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has had a strained relationship with the White House over tariffs, focused on the victims and not gun control in his official response.

鈥淗orrible news from El Paso today. Canadians are grieving with our American neighbours and friends for the lives that were senselessly taken, and wishing all those injured a speedy recovery,鈥 he .

Neither of the main opposition federal party leaders have weighed in on the shootings on social media. Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has pushed for stronger background checks in Canada but rejected calls for a handgun ban and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, has urged Ottawa to allow cities to ban handguns.

NDP MP Charlie Angus pointed criticism at the gun lobby, particularly at the National Rifle Association, which has strongly opposed gun legislation and any meaningful firearm restrictions.

鈥淚t is time to ban the directors of the #NRA from entering Canada. We need to put this organization on Canada's watch list of terrorist organizations,鈥 he wrote in one in a . 鈥淓nough of this (expletive).鈥


REACTIONS AROUND THE WORLD

Meanwhile, across the world others are weighing in 鈥 including Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, who that their attorney general was considering litigation claiming terrorism was committed against the seven Mexicans killed during the El Paso shooting.

In a , French President Emmanuel Macron expressed his 鈥渟olidarity with the victims, their loved ones and the American people.鈥

The El Paso shooting took place in a Walmart store -- a big box chain which sells firearms -- and the company鈥檚 CEO, Doug McMillon, took to Instagram to react.

鈥淢y heart aches for the community in El Paso, especially the associates and customers at store 2201 and the families of the victims of today鈥檚 tragedy,鈥 McMillon .

Apple CEO Tim Cook to say he was 鈥渉eartbroken鈥 about the recent mass shootings. 鈥淚t's time for good people with different views to stop finger pointing and come together to address this violence for the good of our country,鈥 he said.

The network provider CloudFlare even pulled their support for 8chan, the website where the El Paso gunman may have posted a 鈥渕anifesto鈥 before going on his rampage.


ELLEN PAGE, CARDI, B, AND JULLIANNE MOORE WEIGH IN

Canadian actor and vocal gun control advocate Ellen Page has been retweeting , and critical of stalled gun control action.

On Instagram, rapper Cardi B a viral photo of the alleged El Paso shooter, who was charged with capital murder on Sunday, noting that he wasn鈥檛 an immigrant -- a group in the U.S. which Trump regularly targets as sources of crime.

Her post stated the shooter is not "an immigrant, not a Muslim, and not a member of ISIS," and stressed Trump鈥檚 plans for the U.S.-Mexico border would not solve the crisis.

Popular singer Lizzo 鈥淚 feel completely helpless.. make noise & bring awareness.. vote.. don't normalize this."

In a , actor Julianne Moore urged the U.S. Senate to impose tougher gun legislation and better background check; and called the mass shootings a 鈥減ublic health crisis.鈥

Actor Bradley Whitford pointed that the far surpass the more than 3,000 killed during the September 11th terrorist attacks.

"The NRA/GOP think the blood of 40,000 innocent souls is the price of freedom,鈥 he . "Universal background checks are too high a price to pay. It is a perverse culture of death perpetrated for profit."

鈥淔rozen鈥 and 鈥淏ook of Mormon鈥 actor Josh Gad that his heart was breaking, adding 鈥渢he madness never ends. It is all too much. There鈥榮 nowhere safe from the terror of gun violence in the United States of America.鈥

He called out U.S. lawmakers as being unwilling to deal with the roots of the problem.