Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Gun law advocates pounce on LV shooting

- By Debra J. Saunders

WASHINGTON — After violence pierces U.S. cities and towns, Americans come together. Later politics can drive them apart.

Or not, maybe just this once.

As a grim Monday morning dawned in Las Vegas, Nevada representa­tives in Congress issued statements that eschewed gun politics. They stuck to themes of sympathy and shared useful informatio­n for constituen­ts, such as where they could give blood. President Donald Trump delivered a somber, unifying address to the nation.

Outside Nevada, gun con-

trol advocates urged a more political approach, at the risk of opportunis­m ignorance.

Monday morning, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., jumped on Twitter to say, “To my colleagues: your cowardice to act cannot be whitewashe­d by thoughts and prayers. None of this ends unless we do something to stop it.”

Murphy also sent out a fundraisin­g email that directed the indignant to donate — with proceeds going to anti-gun groups and his 2018 re-election campaign. The link later excluded his campaign, but the whiff of opportunis­m clung to his effort.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tweeted, “The crowd fled at the sound of gunshots. Imagine the deaths if the shooter had a silencer, which the NRA wants to make it easier to get.” (House Republican­s were scheduled to vote on a measure to streamline the purchase of gun suppressor­s last week, but delayed the vote after the mass shooting.)

Thus Clinton displayed the other common foible of gun control advocates — ignorance about firearms. Gun advocates scoffed at her suggestion that silencers would have worsened the carnage, a notion that Politifact ruled as false, as silencers reduce a fired shot’s noise a mere 20 percent or less.

Bump-stock ban bill

On Wednesday all four Nevada Democrats in Congress — Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and Reps. Dina Titus, Ruben Kihuen and Jacky Rosen — announced their support of legislatio­n to ban bump stocks, devices designed to increase the firepower of semi-automatic rifles. Authoritie­s found bump stocks on a dozen of the firearms found in shooter Stephen Paddock’s Mandalay Bay hotel suite.

UNLV political science professor John Tuman said there’s widespread support for Second Amendment rights “in the political culture of Nevada,” but he also believes Democrats were responding to constituen­ts who believe Washington should tighten gun laws.

Nevada GOP Sen. Dean Heller and Rep. Mark Amodei have reason to urge the Trump administra­tion to ban bump stocks administra­tively. Such an action would spare them from having to cast a vote likely to alienate some of their voters — and to ban a device that the vast majority of gun owners probably never heard of until last week.

Many gun rights advocates believe that lawmakers like Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., sponsor of the Senate bump stock ban, won’t stop with bump stocks. She is, after all, the author of the 1994 federal assault weapons ban that lasted for 10 years.

It’s hard to argue against the slippery slope notion. When the National Rifle Associatio­n shocked Washington with its support for regulation­s to restrict bump stocks, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto said in a statement, “The NRA’s announceme­nt is a welcome opening for conversati­on on additional measures we can take to protect the lives of Americans.”

Do gun laws work?

On the other side of the issue, there’s a general suspicion that broad gun laws don’t work. The Washington Post ran a much-discussed opinion piece last week in which statistici­an Leah Libresco disclosed how three months of team research on gun deaths crushed her belief that sweeping gun laws work.

“By the time we published our project, I didn’t believe in many of the interventi­ons I’d heard politician­s tout,” Libresco wrote. “I was still anti-gun, at least from the point of view of most gun owners, and I don’t want a gun in my home, as I think the risk outweighs the benefits. But I can’t endorse policies whose only selling point is that gun owners hate them.”

Measures that Libresco once considered “common sense reforms” didn’t really work. Good intentions yielded “policies that often seem as if they were drafted by people who have encountere­d guns only as a figure in a briefing book or an image on the news.”

That is the hurdle supporters of gun restrictio­ns will have to overcome: Would their prescripti­on have stopped shooter Stephen Paddock, who bought his arsenal legally after passing a background check?

Keep in mind the number of guns that already exist in the United States — in 2013 the Pew Foundation estimated between 270 million and 320 million.

Asked on Fox News whether he would support a measure to ban bump stocks, a frustrated Heller described the Sunday night shooting and responded, “You show me the law that would stop that, not only would I support it, I would be an advocate for that law.”

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? President Donald Trump speaks Wednesday at Metropolit­an Police Department headquarte­rs. Trump spoke with first responders and civilians who helped out in the aftermath of Sunday’s shooting, an event the White House labeled the “heroes meet and greet.”
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal President Donald Trump speaks Wednesday at Metropolit­an Police Department headquarte­rs. Trump spoke with first responders and civilians who helped out in the aftermath of Sunday’s shooting, an event the White House labeled the “heroes meet and greet.”

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