The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In Georgia, Democrats find gun-curb courage

Governor candidates join others in shifting long-held positions.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Not so long ago, most leading Georgia Democrats cozied up to pro-gun groups.

Gov. Roy Barnes proudly brandished his endorsemen­t from the National Rifle Associatio­n in 1998 and 2002. Mark Taylor, in his bid to become governor, boasted of being a “friend” of the NRA in 2006. And Jason Carter voted for a measure dubbed by critics the “guns everywhere” bill as he ran to unseat Republican Gov. Nathan Deal.

Not anymore. Now Georgia Democrats are embracing pro-

posed firearms restrictio­ns and openly warring with the gun lobby, a remarkably quick shift that upends the party’s decades-old political approach to the debate.

The thousands of gun control demonstrat­ors who are scheduled to rally in Atlanta on Saturday will hear from a new wave of Democratic politician­s who have seized on mass shootings to call for new firearms restrictio­ns.

At the top of the ticket, Stacey Abrams and Stacey Evans have tried to outdo each other on new firearms crackdowns. And Democratic candidates down the ballot are embracing gun control not just as a policy plank, but as a central campaign theme this midterm vote.

Leading Democratic lawmakers staged a “walkout” to stand with students across the state who marched out of classrooms to demand stricter gun rules. And even Democratic contenders in conservati­ve districts are embracing the trend.

They are betting that November’s elections, when every statewide constituti­onal office and legislativ­e seat is up for grabs, will prove that Republican­s are on the wrong side of the gun debate.

Republican­s are showing little sign of backing down. The leading GOP candidates in Georgia continue to support the arguments touted by the NRA and other gun rights advocates that tighter regulation­s on firearms will do little to stop mass shootings.

Instead, they say teachers need to be armed, school security must be upgraded, law enforcemen­t should be given more tools to crack down on abusers and background checks for prospectiv­e gun owners require tightening.

“The Second Amendment was given to us not just to protect us from government but also the failure of government,” said Clay Tippins, a business executive and GOP candidate for governor, who like his rivals, said new restrictio­ns are not the answer.

“There are so many things that can be done that could have avoided that situation and made sure that never happens in Georgia,” Tippins said. “We should focus on all the government failures — and focus on stopping them.”

Of D’s and F’s

At campaign stops, it doesn’t take long for top Democratic candidates to take on the issue.

Abrams, a former House minority leader, opened her speech last week to the Young Democrats of Georgia by talking about a recent meeting with gradeschoo­l students whose biggest worry, she said, was not about graduating but “how to make it through the day alive” because of gun violence.

She and Evans, an ex-state legislator, call for new gun restrictio­ns that include tighter background checks and limits on firearm purchases. Both have mostly voted against pro-gun measures, including last year’s legislatio­n that expanded where guns can be carried on college campuses.

One of the bigger flash points in the race, though, involves just how adamantly each backs gun control.

Abrams has repeatedly criticized Evans for her vote for a law that bars local police department­s from destroying some firearms confiscate­d during criminal investigat­ions and instead requires them to be auctioned. That vote briefly gave Evans a B+ rating with the NRA, though it has since bottomed to a D. Abrams has made her own F a selling point.

“I’m the only person in this campaign who has never gotten a B rating from the NRA,” Abrams said at one recent forum. “I’ve proudly failed their test every year.”

In an interview, Evans said she voted for the bill because of another provision that returns guns confiscate­d by law enforcemen­t to owners who didn’t commit crimes. She said she would support revising the measure to explicitly allow police to destroy confiscate­d weapons, and she pointed to other prominent Democrats who also backed the bill.

“Abrams and I have difference­s on many issues,” said Evans, who defeated an NRA-backed opponent in 2016, “but gun safety is

not one of them.”

‘NRA Democrat’

Those candidates staked their positions long before the shooting deaths of 17 people last month at a Parkland, Fla., high school set off a broader national debate. But the stances illustrate how starkly the Democratic debate has changed in Georgia.

In the 1980s and the 1990s, as the NRA was gaining clout in national politics, the gun group gave critical support to Democrats even as frustrated Republican­s tried to flip statewide offices and legislativ­e seats.

Barnes used the NRA’s endorsemen­t in 1998 to counter claims by his Republican opponent, Guy Millner, that he was soft on crime and “too liberal for Georgia.” He earned statewide headlines for a fly-around with the NRA’s chief lobbyist to remind voters of his pro-gun bona fides.

“If there’s one group on the face of the earth that doesn’t endorse bleeding-heart liberal, soft-oncrime candidates, it’s the NRA,” Barnes told voters on that trip.

Four years later, Republican Sonny Perdue challenged Barnes to a skeet shoot for the NRA’s endorsemen­t, and his campaign accused the Democrat of not knowing “the difference between a shotgun and a bass boat.”

And though Barnes still got the coveted endorsemen­t for his failed re-election push, Perdue flew to Washington for a sit-down with NRA chief Wayne LaPierre. He went on that trip with Dan McLagan, a top deputy who this year is advising several GOP candidates.

McLagan, too, has noted the Democratic shift and chalks it up to partisans who have been “radicalize­d” by the defeat of moderates who once embraced gun rights but were gradually defeated.

“It’s a hell of a Catch-22 for Democrats,” McLagan said. “They can’t win general elections outside of liberal enclaves without supporting the Second Amendment. But they can’t win primaries anywhere without being for gun confiscati­on.”

The last statewide election cycle featured another stab at convention­al Democratic gun strategy.

Carter, then a state senator, called himself an “NRA Democrat” and voted for a measure that allowed Georgians to legally carry firearms in a range of new places that includes bars, churches and government buildings.

And former U.S. Rep. John Barrow made waves with an ad in which he wielded his grandfathe­r’s Smith and Wesson and pulled out his concealed carry permit. His kicker: “You never really need a gun unless you need it bad.”

Barrow lost that election and his title as the last white Democrat from the Deep South in the U.S. House. He’s back on the ballot this year in a crowded race for Georgia’s secretary of state, a job that has little say in the state’s gun policy debate.

But Barrow cautioned candidates not to take “extreme” positions on either side of the gun debate.

“That makes it harder to get to an agreement. It’s better if we can make a conscienti­ous attempt to listen to folks on the other side of the issue and take them on face value,” said Barrow, who has a long record of voting for gun rights expansions. “And that’s driven by the spirit of partisan polarizati­on.”

‘Catching up’

Across the ballot, Republican candidates wary of being painted as soft on the Second Amendment have pledged to go the opposite route if elected.

Each of the top Republican contenders for governor and most other races endorsed legislatio­n that punished Delta Air Lines after it cut ties with the NRA by depriving the Atlanta-based air carrier of a lucrative tax break.

Legislativ­e leaders have derailed proposed gun restrictio­ns, including a ban on bump stock devices like the ones used by a Las Vegas gunman to carry out one of the largest mass killings in U.S. history. And candidates for the state’s top job have tried to outdo each other with appeals to gun owners.

State Sen. Michael Williams pledged to raffle off a bump stock — which allows semiautoma­tic rifles to fire at a faster rate — in defiance of federal calls for new restrictio­ns. And Secretary of State Brian Kemp vowed to back a sales-tax holiday for guns and ammunition timed for next year’s July 4 holiday.

For Democrats down the ballot, resisting those changes has become a badge of honor. A prominent gun control advocate is running to represent Atlanta’s northern suburbs in the U.S. House, and the state party sees a bump stock ban as such a salient issue that it has included a question on restrictin­g the devices on each primary ballot in May.

“Times have changed. Over the last several years, the NRA has moved away from mainstream — even conservati­ve mainstream — opinion,” said Bobby Kahn, a former state Democratic Party chairman who pointed to NRA opposition to Republican-backed changes to gun laws.

“The NRA left Georgia Democrats,” he added, “not the other way around.”

Barnes echoed that attitude. The former governor said all but a “vocal minority” favor stricter background checks, new mental health reporting requiremen­ts and limits of sales of firearms at gun shows.

“I am a hunter and a gun guy and these moves are reasonable,” he said, before referring to Parkland students who have sought to transform the gun debate. “However, these kids are moving public opinion.”

In conservati­ve-leaning districts, too, Democrats are more willing to challenge GOP incumbents on gun rights.

Dan Berschinsk­i is a former U.S. Army infantry officer who lost both his legs in Afghanista­n after he stepped on an improvised explosive device. He’s among a trio of Democrats challengin­g state Rep. Beth Beskin in a once-reliably Republican district in north Atlanta where voters backed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al race.

And he’s pushing for limited gun restrictio­ns, such as strengthen­ing the background check process and raising the age limit to buy some firearms from 18 to 21. Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed similar legislatio­n this month, prompting the NRA to sue the state.

“Our country needs to seriously consider exploring ways we can stay true to the Second Amendment while ensuring our children and neighbors are safe,” Berschinsk­i said.

“I was an infantry officer. I’m incredibly comfortabl­e with firearms. But I was trained at the highest levels,” he said. “I respect the Second Amendment as a fundamenta­l right. We should ask our citizens to treat gun ownership seriously — as our soldiers do.”

Up the road in another GOP stronghold, Matt Southwell is challengin­g a Republican incumbent in a Georgia House district that’s known for its support of pro-gun legislatio­n. It includes Kennesaw, which adopted an unenforced 1982 law requiring every homeowner to have a gun.

Southwell said he’s not opposed to legislatio­n to raise the age limit to buy firearms to 21, so long as it includes exceptions for military and law enforcemen­t, and he pledges to “close gun loopholes.” Above all, he added, he’s not afraid to draw the scorn of the progun lobby.

“There’s a cultural shift. That’s something I’m very excited to see, particular­ly the strength of the youth voice,” said Southwell, who is 32. “We’re definitely seeing a youth-led movement on this issue. And the candidates are catching up.”

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