Khaleej Times

America needs strict gun control laws and soon

- ElizabEth DrEw Project Syndicate Elizabeth Drew is a Washington-based journalist

After every mass shooting in the United States, Americans and others around the world are confronted with the question of what lies behind this distinctly American horror. Though total gun deaths in the US have actually declined over time, mass shootings (those with at least four victims) have become deadlier and more frequent. Some have had an especially strong emotional impact on the country.

The back-to-back mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, on the first weekend of August are widely being viewed as the straw that will break the back of the US gun lobby, particular­ly the National Rifle Associatio­n (NRA), which has long stood in the way of congressio­nal passage of gun-control measures. Yet we have heard similar prediction­s before. After the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticu­t on December 14, 2012, when a 20-year-old man gunned down 20 first-graders and six adults, then-President Barack Obama, wiping tears from his eyes, vowed to take action.

On the face of it, adopting meaningful gun-control legislatio­n after such a horrendous tragedy should not have been a problem. Polls showed that 92 per cent of the public supported closing loopholes in the requiremen­t for background checks — which at present don’t include examinatio­ns of individual­s purchasing firearms at gun shows, privately from another individual, or online — and that 62 per cent supported a ban on high-capacity magazines. It was hard to ignore the emotional appeal of the shattered parents who’d come to Washington to plead their case. Yet, even in the wake of Sandy Hook, the US Senate voted down two measures to tighten gun-control laws.

To understand why, it’s important to keep in mind that the politics of gun control emanate from the same counter-majoritari­an principle that gave Americans the Electoral College. In the Senate, far less populous western, midwestern, and southern states — home to hunters and conservati­ve-leaning John Wayne wannabes — have the same representa­tion

as far larger states like New York and California. So, even when most Americans favour stronger gun-control laws, that majority position isn’t necessaril­y reflected in the makeup of the Senate.

At the same time, gun-control opponents have benefited enormously from a seemingly nonsensica­l interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment. In reality, the Second Amendment is a product of its time, reflecting the former colonies’ perceived need to protect themselves from a standing government army. Moreover, the weapons of the time were simple objects compared to the deadly semiautoma­tics and magazines that the NRA tries to convince “sportsmen” they must have, and for which there is no appropriat­e civilian purpose. (Needless to say, gun manufactur­ers have contribute­d millions of dollars to the NRA.)

The prevailing evidence shows that mass-shooting deaths fell during the years when the assault-weapons ban was in place, and then rose after it lapsed. If a tightened new ban were enacted, along with a reduction in the legal magazine capacity to ten (from as much as 100 now), that would be a sign that Trump and Congress are serious about curbing mass slaughters. But there is little likelihood of it happening.

Still, in the wake of the El Paso and Dayton shootings, Trump has begun to strike a somewhat different tone on the issue, indicating that he would support “very meaningful background checks.” But Trump talked the same way after a gunman murdered 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in February 2018. He soon backed off under pressure from the NRA (which, it is worth rememberin­g, was implicated in Russia’s efforts to help Trump in the 2016 election).

Following the latest two massacres, Trump also called for a “red-flag” law, which would allow courts temporaril­y to confiscate firearms from individual­s deemed to be a danger to themselves or others, following notificati­on by a family member or law-enforcemen­t official. Such laws are already on the books in more than a dozen states, but many conservati­ves oppose them on the grounds that they deny due process. Nonetheles­s, some prominent Republican­s, such as Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, feel they have to do something about the mass shootings, and are now championin­g red-flag legislatio­n.

Trump has once again painted himself into a corner. Since the latest massacres, he’s been at pains to present himself as a reasonable fellow who can get behind gun reform (and perhaps mollify suburban women, his most dangerous foes on this issue). But he’s also noticeably (and typically) anxious to maintain the loyalty of the rural voters who form an important part of his base. Trump has also taken the gamble of using racial politics and white supremacy as instrument­s for winning in 2020. When faced with the dilemma of trying to assuage suburban voters or keeping the base close, time after time his instinct has been to shore up the base. (That didn’t work very well in 2018.)

Whatever happens in the next few months, the fact that there are more privately owned guns than people in the US means that any new gun-control law would have only a marginal effect, at best. Despite the American public’s urgent and desperate demand that lawmakers “do something,” Trump is on a ten-day golfing vacation, and Congress is on its annual August recess. A lot, including a change in the national mood, could happen before it reconvenes. —

Trump has once again painted himself into a corner. Since the latest massacres, he’s been at pains to present himself as a reasonable fellow who can get behind gun reform

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