The Arizona Republic

Pro-gun wish list stalls in Washington

Other GOP priorities keep legislatio­n on back burner CELEBRATE JULY 4TH & FIVE YEARS OF GIVING BACK TO AMERICA’S VETERANS

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

LISA MARIE PANE

ATLANTA - Gun rights advocates entered the Trump era with high hopes. After years of frustratio­n they thought a gun-friendly president and Congress would advance their agenda. At the top of the list: a gun-owner’s ability to bring a legal weapon across any state lines, a policy known as reciprocit­y.

But many of their favorite initiative­s have stalled in Washington, set aside as the city is closely watching the investigat­ions into President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. Republican­s are focused on other priorities, especially health care, but also keeping gun rights on the back burner because they are, in fact, a heavy lift.

Congress faces a public weary of mass shootings, terror attacks and random violence — most recently in the shadows of the nation’s capital when a man disgruntle­d about Trump and conservati­ves opened fire on a ballfield in Alexandria, Virginia, where Republican congressme­n were practicing for a baseball game, injuring five people including a House Republican leader.

A Pew study showed Americans pretty much split on support for gun control, with specific provisions like keeping guns away from the mentally ill or those on watch lists quite popular.

“Reciprocit­y in particular is going to prove to be a harder sell,” said Robert Spitzer, chairman of the political science department at State University of New York at Cortland. “Think gun-toting civilians in Times Square. It’s going to be a hard sell, and the Republican­s will have to squander what few political resources they have to push the bill along.”

The year started off with promise for the gun industry when Congress almost immediatel­y scrapped a rule created to deny people with some mental disorders from purchasing a firearm. On his first day in office, the new Interior secretary — who rode to work that day on horseback — lifted a ban on hunting with lead ammunition on federal park land.

Gun rights groups have other key items on their agenda. After reciprocit­y, a perennial favorite is a measure that would make it easier to buy suppressor­s, commonly referred to as silencers. Supporters argue it would not only lower noise from guns — especially long guns used by hunters — but also add a potential market as they see sales drop. So what’s happened? Not much. Gun-control advocates say one reason is that they’ve become better organized and energized over the past decade after a spate of high-profile shootings — from the near-fatal attack on then-Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords to the killing of 26 people, including 20 children, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticu­t.

The gun lobby argues that the current patchwork of laws. For example, someone who has a weapons permit in Georgia is prohibited from bringing their gun into 17 states. But for someone whose license is from Connecticu­t, there are two dozen states that won’t let them bring a weapon in.

Gun-control advocates contend that reciprocit­y would drop the standard to the lowest common denominato­r, essentiall­y forcing all states to honor the most permissive laws on the books.

“What it’s really about is guns everywhere for anyone, no questions asked,” said John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety. “And that’s the gun lobby’s agenda.”

Reciprocit­y returned to the forefront almost immediatel­y after the Alexandria shooting, with Kentucky Rep. Tom Massie introducin­g legislatio­n that would specifical­ly allow gun owners with valid permits to bring their weapons into the District of Columbia. That is in addition to the measures seeking national reciprocit­y that remain pending in the House and the Senate.

Gun-control advocates caution that Republican­s are treading in politicall­y treacherou­s territory.

“Republican­s have limited amount of political capital . ... And it’s political capital being spent by the day,” said Peter Ambler, executive director of Americans for Responsibl­e Solutions, the outfit founded by Giffords and her husband, Mark Kelly. “They’re very wary of putting a lot of their members through a series of tough votes.”

Larry Keane, senior vice president and general counsel for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, and a veteran of lobbying for gun rights, said gun bills typically take years to be enacted.

“The fact that you have a pro-gun Republican in the White House and pro-gun majorities in both the House and Senate, it doesn’t mean that you’re just going to get your Christmas list all at once and right away. It takes time.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States