Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Rally brings gun rights advocates to Capitol

- ByMark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » A smaller than usual crowd of a few hundred people rallied for gun rights on the steps of Pennsylvan­ia’s Capitol on Tuesday, an annual event that also was attended by a few dozen state lawmakers.

TheRally toProtect Your Right to Keep and Bear Arms constitute­d a pep rally, provided an update on the gun lobby’s legislativ­e efforts and opposition, and gave those present an opportunit­y to target Democratic Gov. TomWolf and other political opponents.

“Gov. Wolf needs to read the Pennsylvan­ia Constituti­on again,” said state Rep. Stephanie Borowicz, a Clinton County Republican. “Every right that has been given to us hinges on the Second Amendment.”

Organizers said rainy weather and the pandemic may have kept

down attendance, and there were none of the busloads that have brought much larger crowds in other years. Most of those in the crowd and a majority of state lawmakers did not wearmasks.

Mark Opdycke, a retired manufactur­ing worker, said he drove from his home in Tatamy to show lawmakers that there is support for the Second Amendment.

Opdycke said he keeps guns primarily for “self- defense against an evil government that we haven’t had to use yet.”

Rep. Harry Readshaw of Allegheny County, one of the few Democratic lawmakers at the event, urged the crowd not to give up the effort.

“You have to be aware of who you’re electing, simply because the newer people don’t seem to understand the Constituti­on, they don’t seemto understand the Second Amendment, and they won’t be for you,” saidReadsh­aw, who is retiring at the end of the year after 13 terms in theHouse.

Legislativ­e proposals to restrict or regulate firearms usually stall in the Republican­majority General Assembly. When lawmakers

and Wolf approved a law in October 2018 to require those convicted of misdemeano­r crimes of domestic violence or subject to protective orders to give up their guns within 24 hours, it was the first anti- violence legislatio­n in the state to deal directly with guns in more than a decade.

Dimitrius Perez, an unemployed resident of West Chester, had an AR- 15 style

rifle slung over his shoulder.

“Here, so far, nothing but good” responses to his open carry, Perez said. “Everywhere else? Terrible.”

Adam Garber, executive director of Cease Fire PA, which advocates to reduce the harmdone by firearms, said gun sales have increased sharply during the pandemic. He said about 1,600 people have been killed by guns in Pennsylvan­ia

in the past year.

“But instead of offering common sense solutions to suicide, domestic violence and gun homicides, some legislator­s and gun rights advocates continue to point towards a phantom threat to people’s right to bear arms,” Garber said. “There is no risk to people’s right to bear arms, just to residents’ lives because of the lack of common sense protection­s.”

 ?? MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People rally for gun rights on the rainy steps of the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol on Tuesday in Harrisburg.
MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People rally for gun rights on the rainy steps of the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol on Tuesday in Harrisburg.

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