Mercury (Hobart)

Fear and loading in USA

VOTERS RUSH TO STOCK UP ON GUNS AND AMMO — WORRIED ABOUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF TRUMP IS VOTED OUT

- SARAH BLAKE

NORTH CAROLINA: It’s a sunny autumn morning in the Smoky Mountains town of Franklin, North Carolina, and business is booming at Jeff’s Guns and Ammo.

“It is crazy at the moment,” says owner Jeff Wong.

Sales started picking up as unrest flared across the US following the police killing of George Floyd in May, but as next week’s election approaches it is becoming “more than we can handle”, he says.

“Not just double the business, much more than double.

“Normally every election year or Christmas it’s OK, but this year is a big year.”

The vast majority of Mr Wong’s current business is made of new customers buying weapons and ammunition to “protect their homes”.

Many of them are women “looking after their family”, he says, including an 85- yearold granny who bought her first gun this month.

Gun sales dropped in the first three years of Donald Trump’s presidency, reflecting a trend of Americans trusting conservati­ves to protect their right to bear arms.

But the uncertaint­y of 2020 has flipped this, and there is now a nationwide ammunition shortage and soaring weapons sales.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation says more than 5 million Americans “brought a gun for the first time this year”.

“We’ve recorded more than 13.8 million background checks for the sale of a gun this year,” said NSSF spokesman Mark Oliva.

“That tops figures for all of 2019 in just the first eight months of 2020.”

Franklin gun safety instructor Scott Williamson says 90 per cent of the graduates of his introducto­ry class for concealed weapon carry licences are women.

“They are concerned that we are going to lose our police,” says Mr Williamson, 69. “They’re putting so much pressure on politician­s to minimise the effectiven­ess of the police. They realise they may have to take their security into their own hands.”

Ever since Richard Nixon stormed to the White House in 1968 on a pledge to restore “law and order” at the end of a chaotic decade, Republican­s

have known the advantage of campaignin­g on the issue.

Mr Trump has kept true to this script, constantly warning of the risk of “lawless” Democrats taking over.

“If the left gains power, they’ll launch a nationwide crusade against law enforcemen­t,” he said recently at the White House.

“Taking their funds away, their firearms, their fundamenta­l authoritie­s — taking everything away, including your freedom. Joe Biden even said, when you call 911, a therapist should answer the call. That doesn’t work.”

At the indoor rifle range attached to Jeff’s Guns and Ammo, Mr Williamson has a message for anyone looking to bring trouble to his bucolic country town.

“This is a relatively conservati­ve area, and in Macon County we have a very high concentrat­ion of people who have concealed carry ( gun) permits, so it’s unlikely they’re going to try and stir up some trouble here,” he says.

“So in this area, we seem to be good for now. What’s going to happen in several years I can’t say. We’re all very concerned about the election.”

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