-Caveat Lector-

Sunday, February 25

Conservative Democrats: Drop gun control bills

By Eunice Moscoso, Palm Beach Post Washington Bureau
Sunday, February 25, 2001

WASHINGTON -- Some conservative Democrats have three words of
advice for their party leaders: Drop gun control.
"This is not an issue that helps the Democratic Party, particularly in
rural America," said Rep. Jim Turner, D-Texas. "Those of us who believe
in the Second Amendment and the right of gun ownership have been
pretty outspoken in telling our friends this is an issue they need to leave
alone."
Turner and fellow House Democrats and Texans Ralph Hall and Max
Sandlin are concerned about renewed efforts to push gun control in
Congress.
Two powerful senators -- Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., and John McCain,
R-Ariz. -- are working on a bill that would increase background checks
at gun shows and provide additional money to enforce existing laws.
In addition, Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., plans to introduce a measure that
would mandate background checks for all buyers at gun shows and
expand the definition of a gun show to include events, such as flea
markets and swap meets, where firearms are not the main product sold.
The Texas lawmakers say gun control efforts have hurt Democrats,
including former Vice President Al Gore.
"If the Democrats and the Gore campaign had not been so strident in
opposition to gun rights . . . there's absolutely no doubt that Vice
President Gore would be president," Sandlin said. "It cost him a
tremendous amount of support across the South."
Sandlin said that passing any gun control bill will be difficult, especially
in the House.
In the last Congress, with the Clinton White House clamoring for gun
control, a bill never made it out of a conference committee.
The measure started out strong in 1999, when gun control took the
spotlight in Congress after the shooting tragedy at Columbine High
School in Littleton, Colo.
A month after the shooting, the Senate stunned the powerful gun lobby
and voted for a juvenile justice bill that included provisions such as
increasing background checks at gun shows.
But the measure never made it through the House, and efforts to
incorporate it into a joint House-Senate juvenile justice bill failed.
With President Bush in the White House, chances for a gun control bill
could be even more bleak.
As governor of Texas, Bush generally sided with the National Rifle
Association, signing bills that allow people to carry concealed weapons
and prevent municipalities from suing gun makers.
But supporters of gun control say that the issue has momentum
because of increasing public support.
"The gun issue works in different places in different ways," said Joe
Sudbay, public policy director for the Violence Policy Center, a gun
control group based in Washington.
Women across the country strongly support gun control, as do urban
and suburban voters, he said.
Sudbay disputes that supporting gun control cost Gore the White
House.
The swing states of Pennsylvania and Michigan voted for Gore despite a
strong anti-Gore campaign there by the NRA, he said.
Some conservative and moderate Democrats, including Hall, say they
are willing to listen to ideas about further regulation of gun shows and
trigger lock requirements.
"I understand that handguns are a problem. People get killed with them.
Children get killed with them. And I think we ought to continue to pursue
something on it," Hall said.
But Hall also said he would have a hard time voting for "anything that
violates or dents the Second Amendment" because the ultimate goal of
gun control proponents is to outlaw possession, as the nation's capital
has done.
"I'm here in Washington, D.C. -- probably the most dangerous city in the
northeastern part of the country after darkness falls -- with a painted
glass between me and the outside world . . . and I can't have a gun in
my home. Give me a break," he said.
Turner said he hopes his party will focus on other matters. "The
Democrats desperately need to unite behind issues that have a broad
base of support within our caucus," he said. "There's a large number of
Democrats who are strong supporters of the Second Amendment."
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Copyright © 2001, The Palm Beach Post. All rights reserved.
©2001 Cox Interactive Media

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