Houston Chronicle Sunday

Donor wants assault weapons banned

- By Alexander Burns

A prominent Republican political donor demanded on Saturday that the party pass legislatio­n to restrict access to guns, and vowed not to contribute to any candidates or electionee­ring groups that did not support a ban on the sale of military-style firearms to civilians.

Al Hoffman Jr., a Floridabas­ed real estate developer who was a leading fundraiser for George W. Bush’s campaigns, said he would seek to marshal support among other Republican political donors for a renewed assault weapons ban.

“For how many years now have we been doing this — having these experience­s of terrorism, mass killings — and how many years has it been that nothing’s been done?” Hoffman said in an interview. “It’s the end of the road for me.”

Hoffman announced his ultimatum in an email to half a dozen Republican leaders, including Jeb Bush and Gov. Rick Scott of Florida. He wrote in the email that he would not give money to Scott, who is considerin­g a campaign for the Senate in 2018, or other Florida Republican­s he has backed in the past, including Rep. Brian Mast, if they did not support new gun legislatio­n.

“I will not write another check unless they all support a ban on assault weapons,” he wrote. “Enough is enough!”

Hoffman, a former ambassador to Portugal, has donated millions to Republican candidates and causes over the years, including more than $1 million to Right to Rise, a super PAC that supported Jeb Bush’s presidenti­al campaign in 2016.

A critic of President Donald Trump, Hoffman has continued to donate heavily to other Republican­s.

Alluding to past mass killings, Hoffman argued in his email that future gun massacres were inevitable without government interventi­on: “If we go from Orlando to Las Vegas, and now Parkland, you just have to know that there are others around the country just dreaming about staging another mass murder.”

Republican elected officials in Washington and Florida have shown no significan­t interest in considerin­g new gun restrictio­ns after the Florida school shooting. The party, which has full control of both the state and federal government, has traditiona­lly opposed virtually all new limitation­s on firearms.

Scott has resisted pressure to back new gun regulation­s after the killing of 17 students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Broward County on Wednesday, though he said “everything’s on the table” in a television interview.

And Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida voiced resistance to discussing gun control in a speech after the massacre, arguing in the Senate that a person determined to carry out an attack would find the weaponry to do it regardless of government regulation­s.

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