USA TODAY US Edition

Abbott gives win to gun advocates

New law allows handgun without permit in Texas

- Nicole Cobler Austin American-Statesman

Gov. Greg Abbott has signed a bill to allow holstered handguns to be carried in Texas without a permit, delivering a victory for gun advocates and the conservati­ve wing of the party.

Beginning Sept. 1, House Bill 1927 will allow anyone 21 years old or older who can legally possess a firearm in Texas to carry a handgun in public without a permit. Current state law allows residents 21 or older to carry a handgun only after completing the required training and criminal background check to obtain a license to carry.

The House and Senate sent the measure to Abbott last month after reaching a compromise that addressed some concerns from law enforcemen­t.

Under the measure, which Abbott signed Wednesday, law enforcemen­t officials can stop a person without cause for carrying a handgun, which the House had hoped to strip.

The bill also allows those previously convicted of unlawfully carrying a handgun in a public place to have the conviction expunged from their record, and provides a limited affirmativ­e defense for those who mistakenly bring their handgun to certain prohibited places.

The bill directs the Texas Department of Public Safety to create a free, online gun safety course, but training is no longer required to carry a handgun. Businesses can prohibit guns by posting a sign.

Democrats and gun control activists have denounced the bill, which they say would increase gun violence in Texas and make it easier for criminals to obtain a gun. Texas Democrats also have expressed frustratio­n that the Legislatur­e failed to pass bipartisan gun control measures in the aftermath of multiple mass shootings in the state.

Progress Texas executive director Ed Espinoza said Wednesday that Abbott and Republican­s are out of touch with voters.

“In passing permitless carry, Republican­s are saying that you no longer need a license to carry a gun, but you still need one to vote,” Espinoza said in a statement. “The public was not asking for this and voters overwhelmi­ngly oppose the measure, but right wing legislator­s forced it through anyway.”

Most Texans oppose removing the requiremen­t to obtain a state permit to carry a handgun, according to a recent poll from the University of Texas and the Texas Tribune. Fifty-nine percent of Texans object to the idea, with 56% of Republican­s supporting the measure, the survey found.

Republican­s, who call the bill “constituti­onal carry,” argue that the measure puts Texas in line with at least 20 other states where handguns can be carried without a permit and appropriat­ely expands gun rights under the Second Amendment.

“Ultimately, we came out with a bill that is strong, and no doubt is the strongest restoratio­n of Second Amendment rights that any of us have ever seen in the history of the state of Texas,” said State Rep. Matt Schaefer, a Republican and author of the bill.

 ?? JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Gov. Greg Abbott talks in his office at the Texas Capitol on June 2.
JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN Gov. Greg Abbott talks in his office at the Texas Capitol on June 2.

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