Hillary Clinton said that a gun buyback measure similar to the one implemented in Australia "would be worth considering" at the national level on Friday.

Clinton was asked at a New Hampshire town hall whether she thought an Australian-style policy could be implemented in the U.S.

"Recently, Australia managed to get away, or take away tens of thousands, millions of handguns. In one year, they were all gone. Can we do that? If we can't, why can't we?" A New Hampshire man asked Clinton.

"I think that’s worth considering. I do not know enough detail to tell you how we would do it, or how would it work, but certainly your example is worth looking at," Clinton said.

The Australia example is a favorite with politicians who favor stricter gun control measures, although rarely is it mentioned that Australia’s 1996 buyback was coercive—although citizens were compensated for their firearms, it was more accurately a program to confiscate firearms, particularly rifles.

To this point, Clinton has proposed gun control laws more modest than a national buyback, like universal background checks. However, there is evidence that she may privately prefer something like a Australian-style solution.

According to audio obtained by the Washington Free Beacon, Clinton said that "the Supreme Court was wrong" on guns, a likely reference to the court’s landmark 2008 decision that gun ownership was an individual right protected by the Constitution.

Transcript below: