Texarkana Gazette

Vulnerable lawmakers answer a noisy gun debate with silence

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NEW YORK—They crowded around the White House conference table this past week, lawmakers from California, Connecticu­t, Texas and Florida, eager to share their state’s painful experience with gun violence.

One key state was not represente­d. No one from Nevada, home to the deadliest shooting in modern U.S. history just five months ago, attended the televised discussion with the president.

But in the politics of gun control, even those who say the least have considerab­le sway. Despite a clamor for action in the wake of the Florida school shooting, a powerful group of vulnerable lawmakers—both Republican­s and Democrats—have pointedly avoided the national conversati­on about guns.

They often choose strategic silence rather than get crosswise with the National Rifle Associatio­n’s die-hard supporters on the right or the growing movement of passionate gun control advocates on the left. The office of Nevada’s senior senator, Republican Dean Heller, would not say why did he did not attend the White House meeting. Heller, who is facing a tough re-election fight, has avoided the spotlight in the subsequent days as well, declining to address specifics about his positions on gun legislatio­n. The White House did not respond to requests for comment about whether Heller was invited to the event. The state’s Democratic senator, Catherine Cortez Masto, and its three Democratic representa­tives also did not attend.

Heller spokeswoma­n Megan Taylor declined to say whether the senator supported universal background checks, raising the age for gun purchases to 21, or provisions to ban high-capacity magazines and assault rifles, all ideas tossed out by lawmakers or President Donald Trump in recent days.

“He looks forward to continuing discussion­s with his colleagues as Congress explores ways to enhance compliance with existing law and keep our communitie­s safe,” Taylor said.

Heller has signed on to legislatio­n known as “Fix NICS,” a modest measure supported by the NRA and intended to encourage better participat­ion in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. It was one of the few gun bills to find bipartisan support and appeared poised to move ahead, only to be sidelined. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican who has said little about the gun debate in recent days, said Thursday that no gun-related legislatio­n would be heard in the coming week.

Without this silent majority’s support, there is little chance for significan­t gun control legislatio­n to become federal law, no matter how loud the outcry from high school students and others who are pushing for action.

The stalemate infuriates Ryan Works, a 40-year-old father of two, who hid under a table at an October concert in Las Vegas as a gunman shot and killed 58 and wounded more than 800. A Republican, Works offered an emotional message to Heller and elected officials in both parties who are reluctant to take on gun violence.

“Step up and do something,” he said in an interview, almost shouting as he described shopping for bulletback­packs for his 5- and 8-year-old children. “Show us that you care and you’re going to protect us.”

Heller’s muted response at an extraordin­ary moment highlights the weight of his political predicamen­t.

Running for re-election in a state Trump lost, he must win over a significan­t number of independen­ts and moderate Democrats in November’s general election to earn a second term. But first, he must survive a primary challenge from a conservati­ve firebrand in a state where GOP primary voters value gun rights above almost all else. The challenge is easy to see in recent polls. Two out of three adults in the United States want stricter gun laws, CBS found in a poll conducted a week after the Feb. 14 shooting in Parkland, Florida. But among Republican­s, 54 percent want gun laws left alone or made less strict. That’s likely why the most politicall­y vulnerable elected officials have kept their heads down, leaving the heavy lifting to elected officials facing less political risk this fall. On the Senate floor this week, blue-state senators such as Vermont’s Bernie Sanders, Massachuse­tts’ Ed Markey and New Jersey’s Cory Booker offered fiery speeches about gun violence. Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Pat Toomey, a swing-state Republican whose current term ends in 2022, re-emerged as the face of the push for universal background checks. Arizona Sen. Sen. Jeff Flake, a Republican who is retiring at the end of this year, was partnering with California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein on legislatio­n to move the age to buy long guns to 21. Those Democrats running in Republican­leaning states this fall were far less conspicuou­s.

North Dakota Sen. Heidi Heitkamp and Indiana Sen. Joe Donnelly, both Democrats running for re-election in states Trump won handily, have said nothing about gun violence from the Senate floor in recent days, but made statements honoring constituen­ts who had recently passed away. Heitkamp supports the “Fix NICS” plan and co-sponsored a bill that would prevent those on the terrorist watch list from buying guns, her spokeswoma­n said. The senator has previously opposed so-called bump stocks, which the Las Vegas shooter used to increase the firing speed of his semi-automatic rifle.

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