The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Suburban voters are pressuring Republican­s to act on guns

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

GILBERT, ARIZ. >> Following the news has grown stressful for Angela Tetschner, a 39-year-old nurse raising four children in this sprawling Phoenix suburb of tile roofs, desert yards, young families and voters who are increasing­ly up for grabs.

“Sometimes I do think about the school shootings,” said Tetschner, who doesn’t pay much attention to politics but has been disappoint­ed in President Donald Trump, days after sending her 5-year-old boy to kindergart­en. She’d like to see Congress tighten gun laws, but her expectatio­ns for action are low.

“You can’t not put your kid in school,” she said. “I just hope and pray that nothing happens.”

Tetschner’s worries are weighing heavy on Republican­s in Arizona and elsewhere in the wake of recent mass shootings. The party has seen once-reliable suburbs turn competitiv­e as women worry about their children’s safety and bristle at Trump’s harsh rhetoric on race and immigratio­n, and they embraced Democratic alternativ­es in last year’s midterm elections.

GOP candidates looking ahead at tough races increasing­ly are eyeing new ways to address anxieties about gun violence, and to do that without crossing the party’s base, which sees gun restrictio­ns as an infringeme­nt on the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

“Republican­s’ backs are already against the wall among suburban voters, particular­ly college-educated women,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican consultant. “And the inability of our political system to pass what most Americans see as commonsens­e reforms related to gun violence only makes the matter worse.”

That tension is palpable in Arizona, a state with an ardent gun culture as well as a growing population of newcomers seeking sun, jobs and affordable housing in the suburbs that ring Phoenix.

Republican Sen. Martha McSally’s challenge is to navigate that divide. The freshman senator is facing a difficult reelection fight, probably against Democrat Mark Kelly , a former astronaut who became a prominent gun-control advocate after his wife, thenU.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, was shot in the head in an attempted assassinat­ion in Tucson in 2011.

While gun control often fades from the conversati­on weeks after a high-profile shooting, the issue is likely to be a steady presence in this race, but not determine the outcome by itself. “It’s a part of their decision-making process, but it’s only a part of it,” said David Winston, a Republican pollster who advises GOP congressio­nal leaders.

Pressure on McSally has been evident since shootings in California, Texas and Ohio. She has adopted a softer tone and spoken forcefully against hate and domestic terrorism. A vocal supporter of gun rights who once called universal background checks unconstitu­tional, McSally now says she is open to talking about new gun laws. She also says she intends to introduce legislatio­n to make domestic terrorism a federal crime.

“We all need to do our part, whether there’s a federal element, a state element, a society element,” McSally told reporters in Phoenix on Thursday. “Let’s figure out what we can do that’s meaningful, that’s thoughtful, that’s not political theater in order to stop these crimes.”

McSally’s message echoes what other Republican­s are saying.

After two shootings killed 31 people in less than 24 hours, President Donald Trump started talking about tougher background checks on gun buyers and prominent Republican­s expressed support for laws that make it easier for authoritie­s to seize weapons from people deemed suicidal or dangerous.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., a longtime opponent of gun control laws, said the Senate could not fail to act, although he ignored a push by Democrats to call lawmakers back from summer recess to debate the issue.

McSally’s hopes for holding her seat hinge on holding onto voters in suburbs such as Gilbert, Mesa and Scottsdale where Republican­s have traditiona­lly performed well but saw their fortunes wane in last year’s midterms. Before she was appointed to the seat held by the late Sen. John McCain, McSally narrowly lost a 2018 Senate race to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, partly due to voters on the outskirts of Phoenix who split their tickets, voting for both Sinema and Republican Gov. Doug Ducey.

McSally said her talk about changing gun laws is not new. She said that as a congresswo­man, she sponsored an National Rifle Associatio­n-backed bill to improve background checks by making sure the database of people barred from owning guns is complete. But her openness, at least rhetorical­ly, to new restrictio­ns is a departure from her responses to earlier large-scale shootings.

After the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, last year, McSally told an Arizona newspaper: “We have to address how we deal with those dealing with mental health issues.”

The Republican Main Street Partnershi­p, a group of about 50 GOP members of Congress representi­ng suburban districts, believes women in suburbs overwhelmi­ngly support action.

Suburban women “want their guns, but they also want some kind of background checks,” said Sarah Chamberlai­n, the group’s president and CEO.

Democrats have reason to be skeptical of Republican pledges on gun legislatio­n. Trump has shifted gears before, under NRA pressure. McConnell has not taken up a House-passed bill approved in February that would require background checks for most private sales, including online and at gun shows, and not just for transactio­ns involving registered gun dealers.

McSally, who may face a primary challenge from an opponent of gun restrictio­ns, is against the House bill. She said the shooters in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, were cleared to buy firearms. She said she is concerned about making criminals of people who lend a gun to their family members or close friends without a background check.

Kelly called on the Senate to approve the House bill.

“To do nothing is irresponsi­ble and dangerous,” Kelly said in a statement released by his campaign.

Polls show McSally’s red line on universal background checks does not align with the views of most Americans and may even face skepticism in Arizona.

Sixty-two percent of midterm voters in the U.S. and 56 percent in Arizona said gun laws should be made tougher, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of the 2018 electorate. A March poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found about 8 in 10 Americans in favor of a federal law requiring background checks on all gun buyers, including at gun shows and by private sale. Three-quarters of Republican­s backed the idea.

“Should a gun be sold online to just anybody? No,” said Brittany Barnum of Mesa, Arizona, a 32-yearold mother of a 3-yearold. Barnum, who voted for Trump, said she’s considered homeschool­ing her son out of concerns about school shootings.

Tetschner, the mother who lives outside Phoenix, said she is not against gun ownership, but would like to see “strict rules” to ensure people with psychologi­cal issues do not buy them.

 ?? JONATHAN J. COOPER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., speaks to reporters about guns following a visit to a grocery store pharmacy in Phoenix, Thursday. McSally and other Republican­s looking ahead at tough races increasing­ly are looking for new ways to address anxieties about gun violence — without running crosswise form a OGP base that sees gun restrictio­ns as an infringeme­nt on the constituti­onal right to bear arms.
JONATHAN J. COOPER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., speaks to reporters about guns following a visit to a grocery store pharmacy in Phoenix, Thursday. McSally and other Republican­s looking ahead at tough races increasing­ly are looking for new ways to address anxieties about gun violence — without running crosswise form a OGP base that sees gun restrictio­ns as an infringeme­nt on the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

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