The News (New Glasgow)

Critics across partisan divide assail new gun law

- BY GARY FINEOUT AND KELLI KENNEDY

The political and legal fallout from Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s decision to sign a sweeping gun bill into law following a school massacre was nearly immediate as the National Rifle Associatio­n filed a lawsuit to stop it and political candidates in both parties criticized it.

Republican U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis, who’s running for Florida governor as a champion of gun rights, went on Fox News late Friday night to criticize the law, which raises the minimum age to buy rifles from 18 to 21; extends a three-day waiting period for handgun purchases to include long guns; and bans bump stocks, which allow guns to mimic fully automatic fire.

“I think when you start getting into some of the blanket restrictio­ns on people’s Second Amendment rights, I think that that is constituti­onally vulnerable ... I mean, think about it, you have an enumerated right in the Bill of Rights, there’s really no precedent to just do a blanket ban on certain adults,” DeSantis said on the show.

Grieving families and student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where a shooter killed 17 people last month, worked feverishly in recent weeks to lobby a gun-friendly, Republican-run state government.

The new law fell short of achieving a ban on assault-style weapons, but it creates a so-called guardian program enabling some teachers and other school employees to carry guns.

Five legislator­s seeking statewide office voted against it, as did the chairman of the Republican Party of Florida. GOP Attorney General Pam Bondi praised it but other statewide candidates in the Legislatur­e voted against it. Commission­er of Agricultur­e Adam Putnam has expressed his displeasur­e with the age limits.

Scott, who’s expected to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson this year, has said the legislatio­n shows Florida can move quickly and “get things done,” unlike the federal government. Scott has already blasted Nelson for failing to act on guns while he’s been in Congress.

Democrats, meanwhile, were quick to fault Scott and legislator­s for failing to include a ban on some types of semi-automatic rifles such as the one used in the Parkland shootings.

Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum said that “Florida’s elected officials simply have not done enough to stop our gun violence epidemic, and that remains true even with the Governor’s signature today.”

Miami Beach Mayor and Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Philip Levine said in a statement the law “falls short of the public demands set by the majority of Floridians and the student survivors” of the shooting. “We need to ban assault weapons, pass universal background checks, and we certainly don’t need more guns in our schools.”

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