Baltimore Sun

Party dictates responses to shootings

Data: Ideology of those in power also shapes narrative

- By Christophe­r Ingraham

The best available research shows that restrictin­g gun ownership is key to reducing the toll of gun violence. But new data shows that mass shootings elicit diametrica­lly different legislativ­e responses depending on the party in control.

Republican-led legislatur­es tend to push through bills that make it easier to own and use firearms after a mass shooting, according to research from economists at Harvard Business School and UCLA. Those controlled by Democrats, on the other hand, typically don’t change their policymaki­ng behavior in any significan­t way.

Researcher­s believe this is the manifestat­ion of decades of American gun policy debate, in which gun rights proponents are bett er organized, better funded and more active in the political process than gun control advocates.

“Ultimately, the research suggests that mass shootings do, tragically, create policy windows where change is possible and likely,” said study co-author Deepak Malhotra via email. “The evidence to date suggests that Republican­s who want fewer restrictio­ns on guns have been the ones taking advantage of these situations.”

Researcher­s compiled data of mass shootings in the United States from 1989 to 2014. Mass shootings are defined as “an incident in which four or more people, other than the perpetrato­r (s), are unlawfully killed with a firearm in a single, continuous incident that is not related to gangs, drugs, or other criminal activity.” They restricted the sample to include only shootings in which “at least three of the fatalities were individual­s unrelated to, and not romantical­ly involved with, the shooter(s).”

They also collected data on the 20,409 gun bills introduced in legislatur­es during period, and the 3,199 proposals that eventually became law. They classified each piece of legi sl ation according to whether it restricted gun access (for instance, by implementi­ng stricter background checks or banning certain types of weapons) or loosened access (such as eliminatin­g concealed carry requiremen­ts or allowing guns to be brought into places where they were previously prohibited). Laws that did both, or which were otherwise neutral or unclear, were excluded from the analysis.

They controlled for external factors that could affect the introducti­on of gun bills, like the legislativ­e calendar (bills are more likely to be introduced in the first year of a two-year session), as well as economic and demographi­c factors like unemployme­nt and divorce rates.

The researcher­s found that “the annual number of laws that loosen gun restrictio­ns doubles in the year following a mass shooting in states with Republican-controlled legislatur­es.” Mass shootings in states where Democrats held the majority, on the other hand, didn’t appear to elicit any significan­t policy response in either direction.

The researcher­s explain these findings by noting that “Republican voters: (a) tend to be in favor of expanding gun rights and access to guns, (b) often argue that such actions reduce gun crime, and (c) are more likely than Democratic voters (during our sample period) to mobilize for political action on this issue.”

Another explanatio­n for this asymmetry can be found in recent political science literature showing that lawmakers have a poor understand­ing of what their constituen­ts want when it comes to gun policy. Several studies have shown that Democrats and Republican­s believe their constituen­ts favor much more conservati­ve policies than they actually do. One possible reason is the disproport­ionate influence of business-oriented lobbying groups on the lawmaking agenda.

There are some indication­s that the lopsided policymaki­ng landscape of gun control is changing. In recent years gun control advocates have had considerab­le success in mobilizing their own supporters and closing some of the intensity gap with gun rights advocates. Much of that mobilizati­on has roots in the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, which saw survivors band together and make a sustained push for policy changes.

Political concerns aside, there’s the separate issue of the consensus among gun violence researcher­s that loosening gun restrictio­ns leads to more violence. That was made clear in a 2018 RAND Corporatio­n analysis of the balance of evidence uncovered by gun policy research done in recent decades.

That analysis found evidence that a number of the permissive policies favored by the National Rifle Associatio­n and its allies, like stand-your-ground laws and permit-less concealed carry regulation­s, actually increase homicides and violent crime. Policies like strict background checks and minimum age requiremen­ts, meanwhile, appear to reduce gun violence.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY ?? A sign is displayed near a voter registrati­on table at a protest on Aug. 7 in El Paso, Texas.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY A sign is displayed near a voter registrati­on table at a protest on Aug. 7 in El Paso, Texas.

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