The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Toomey crosses gun-rights divide

- By Marc Levy

CARLISLE, PA. >> Freshman U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey is the rare conservati­ve Republican who is running for reelection with the support of leading gun-control groups, but it may not be enough to save him in Democratic­leaning Pennsylvan­ia in this unusual election year.

Toomey, who also has separated himself from most of his GOP Senate colleagues by refusing to endorse Donald Trump, is facing questions from skeptical Republican­s over his votes to expand background checks and prevent gun purchases by suspected terrorists as he campaigns in a state where Hillary Clinton leads Trump in polls by 10 points in the presidenti­al race.

His stance so angered one gun-rights group that it is backing his Democratic opponent, Katie McGinty, just to send a message to Toomey and any other Republican who might deviate from orthodoxy on guns.

Toomey’s gamble — separating himself from his party and Trump — is drawing help from unlikely quarters for a Republican once endorsed by the National Rifle Associatio­n.

In a blow to McGinty’s campaign, two prominent gun-control activists, billionair­e Michael Bloomberg and former Democratic congresswo­man Gabrielle Giffords, endorsed Toomey. Bloomberg’s political action committee even poured $4 million into Pennsylvan­ia in recent weeks — primarily for TV ads — to support Toomey.

For Toomey, it may help him with a Republican’s perenniall­y thorny task of appealing to moderates in a state where Democrats outnumber Republican­s 4-to-3. But it could hurt him with the Republican base in a passionate gun-rights state.

Polls show the race is virtually tied, and the winner of the Nov. 8 election could tip control of the U.S. Senate.

Some gun-rights activists say they will reluctantl­y vote for Toomey because McGinty supports a long slate of gun restrictio­ns. Others are unsure whether to vote at all.

“I have friends that are saying they are not going to vote for you because of your stance on gun control,” a meet-and-greet audience member, Mark Myers, told Toomey at a Carlisle restaurant last month.

Stephen Mohr, a municipal Republican committeem­an, said he found himself trying to talk hesitant gun owners into backing Toomey while manning a GOP booth at the Elizabetht­own Fair in southcentr­al Pennsylvan­ia a few days ago.

On the campaign trail, Toomey says he doesn’t see a conflict between the right to own a gun and “a three-minute background check,” but also points to his 2010 NRA endorsemen­t and his support for gun-rights causes.

“Katie McGinty and the Democrats are attacking me all the time for all the votes I have cast consistent­ly to make sure we don’t allow the Democrats to deny lawabiding citizens their Second Amendment rights,” Toomey told Myers.

In an interview Friday, Toomey said gun-rights supporters who learn about his record are overwhelmi­ngly supportive and that he believes he will draw votes from both sides of the issue.

“The fact is, the vast majority of people, whatever they think of the Second Amendment, believe that background checks make sense,” Toomey said.

McGinty portrays Toomey’s devotion to gun control as politicall­y calculated and paper-thin, and rolled out her own endorsemen­t from Cease-Fire Pennsylvan­ia. In recent elections, Democrats have largely steered clear of the gun issue, viewing it as a political loser because of the power of the NRA. This year, Clinton and others have made it a focus in the wake of mass shootings of civilians and police.

Gun rights are no small matter in much of Pennsylvan­ia: Even Toomey’s predecesso­r, Arlen Specter, a moderate Republican from Philadelph­ia, cast staunch gun-rights votes during his five terms in office.

Christophe­r Nicholas, a Republican political consultant who worked on four Specter campaigns, said Toomey’s move to the middle on gun rights should win over more voters than he loses. If Toomey ultimately loses, it won’t be because of guns, Nicholas said.

“It will be because of the Trump catastroph­e,” Nicholas said.

Gun rights activists viewed one bill that Toomey supported as an unnecessar­y expansion of background checks and another as potentiall­y depriving people of their Second Amendment rights without due process.

The NRA hasn’t rendered a verdict on Toomey in 2016.

Pennsylvan­ians For Self Protection, a gun-rights group based in suburban Philadelph­ia, may not endorse Toomey, but will try to make it clear that he’s the “lesser of two evils,” president David Sager said. The Pittsburgh-area Firearms Owners Against Crime decided against endorsing either candidate after it endorsed Toomey in 2010, chairman Kim Stolfer said.

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 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., speaks during a news conference in Philadelph­ia. Toomey is the rare conservati­ve Republican who’s running for re-election with the support of gun-control activists, including billionair­e Michael Bloomberg....
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., speaks during a news conference in Philadelph­ia. Toomey is the rare conservati­ve Republican who’s running for re-election with the support of gun-control activists, including billionair­e Michael Bloomberg....

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