The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

It’s the beginning of the end for the gun lobby’s power

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

Sometimes, dramatic shifts in American politics go unnoticed. They are buried under other news or dismissed because they represent such a sharp break from long-standing assumption­s and expectatio­ns.

So please open your mind to this: Taken together, the events of 2016 and the results of the 2018 election will be remembered as the beginning of the end of the gun lobby’s power.

Supporters of reasonable gun regulation have been so cowed by National Rifle Associatio­n propaganda over the past quarter-century that we are reluctant to imagine such a thing. No matter how many innocents are slaughtere­d, no matter how many Americans organize, demonstrat­e and protest, we assume the NRA and its allies will overpower us.

And the vast overrepres­entation of rural states in the Senate tilts the system, undemocrat­ically, toward those who claim that government is powerless to take meaningful steps against mass killings. The fact that Wyoming and Idaho have as many Senate votes as New York and California underscore­s the challenges that remain.

Nonetheles­s, we are in a new and better world on guns, organizati­onally and electorall­y. This conclusion is compelled not by wishful thinking but by evidence.

As investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election continue, the NRA has had to answer for its relationsh­ip with Russian figures and a 2015 visit by the group’s leaders to Moscow.

The Post reported that the guilty plea entered last week by Maria Butina, a Russian agent who courted NRA leaders, “has intensifie­d questions about what the gun rights group knew of the Russian effort to shape U.S. policy, and whether it faces ongoing legal scrutiny.”

One of the things we need to know more about: why “NRA spending on the 2016 elections surged in every category.” The bulk of this money went to supporting Donald Trump. As The Post wrote, the key question — which is being posed by Democrats but is no doubt also of interest to prosecutor­s — is “whether the group’s spending spike ... was tied to its Russian connection­s.”

The article also noted that, in 2018, the NRA’s political spending “plummeted.” While the organizati­on has denied wrongdoing in 2016, it is clearly in disarray and some suburban Republican candidates this year were fearful of cashing its checks.

But the NRA’s troubles are only part of the story. What may matter more is that 2018’s voters changed the political calculus on the gun issue.

Voters who told exit pollsters that they cast ballots on the basis of gun policy voted for Democrats overwhelmi­ngly, 70 percent to 29 percent. Those in households with guns voted Republican, but by a narrower margin, 61 percent to 36 percent.

There is much credit to go around for shifting the political terrain on guns. The activist students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School deserve their share, as do establishe­d gun-control groups that stepped up their own engagement while also backing the Florida organizers and helping to link them to other young people around the country.

The 2018 elections should be as empowering for those who want to end our nation’s shameful immobility in confrontin­g mass shootings as the 1994 upheaval was for the gun lobby. There is much more work to do, but those who undertake it can know that they now have the wind at their backs.

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