After Senate defeats, prospects for gun control shift to states
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Following a dramatic defeat in Wednesday鈥檚 Senate vote on a raft of gun control provisions, a defiant President Obama and his posse of gun control advocates are vowing to press on聽鈥 but the way forward is more likely to be off Capitol Hill, in state houses and legislatures.
Wednesday鈥檚 gun defeat was a grim chapter for gun control advocates and 鈥 if the Senate鈥檚 vote was any indication 鈥 future prospects for gun control legislation in Congress appear grimmer.聽
Each of the seven amendments voted on Wednesday failed (two more are scheduled for Thursday), including Mr. Obama鈥檚 centerpiece effort and the bipartisan proposal with overwhelming public support, expanded background checks. The quashing of that provision 鈥渓ikely marks the end of the entire effort in the Senate,鈥 .
Even more telling was the fate of the least controversial piece of legislation, a measure to crack down on gun trafficking, which had the support of the National Rifle Association and was expected to pass with just a voice vote. That too, failed.
The disappointment in Washington was palpable.
Flanked by visibly grieved relatives of Newtown, Conn., shooting victims, Obama called it 鈥渁 pretty shameful day for Washington.鈥
Shooting survivor and former US Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D) of Arizona penned an angry opinion article claiming that senators 鈥済ave into fear and blocked common-sense legislation.鈥
And yet, the outcome shouldn鈥檛 have come as a surprise to anyone. While polls trumpet overwhelming public support for increased gun controls, it came down to politics, where the NRA is the kingmaker and lawmakers, especially those in rural states, reliably fall into line.
As pundits parsing the bill鈥檚 death have pointed out in their post-mortems, to expect the vote to have gone otherwise is a bald misjudgment and underestimation of the influence of the gun lobby on skittish red-state lawmakers.
The quashing of the gun bill, , was a simple 鈥渃ombination of the political anxiety of vulnerable Democrats from conservative states, deep-seated Republican resistance, and the enduring clout of the National Rifle Association.鈥
What now for gun control? Is there a way forward?
For now, it appears that congressional leaders have conceded defeat.
Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D) of Nevada is expected to pull the entire bill from the Senate floor and move on to issues with better prospects 鈥 namely, immigration and an Internet sales tax provision.
Nonetheless, it may not be the end of the road for gun control advocates. The next front in the battle for gun control? The states.
As the , 鈥渆ven as federal legislation runs into the brick wall of the gun lobby, some states and local jurisdictions are forging ahead.鈥
In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) expanded bans on assault weapons and further limited the size of ammunition magazines, as well as enacted measures to recertify gun licenses and identify mentally ill people who seek to buy weapons.
Ditto Colorado and Connecticut, both of which have seen their own grisly mass shootings and responded with tougher gun laws.
In March, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper (D) signed into law several bills requiring background checks for private and online gun sales, as well as legislation banning ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds. And in April, the Connecticut state legislature passed laws banning the sale of gun magazines with a capacity of more than 10 rounds, requiring background checks for private gun sales, including those at gun shows, as well as expanding the state's current assault weapons ban to include more than 100 gun models.
At least eight other states are considering tougher gun laws, including Oregon, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland.
Still, national gun control leaders insist they are not throwing in the towel.
鈥淭his effort is not over,鈥 Obama said in remarks after the gun bill鈥檚 defeat. 鈥淚 see this as just Round 1.鈥
Reiterated Senator Reid, 鈥淚 want everyone to understand 鈥 this is just the beginning. This is not the end.鈥
Not everyone is so confident.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure what more the president can do, having persuaded 90 percent of the American public to support the heart of this bill, which is background checks,鈥 Sen. Christopher Murphy (D) of Connecticut, a major gun control proponent, . 鈥淭he fact is, senators are simply not listening to their constituents. And I鈥檓 not sure what more the president can do.鈥
Speaking of confident, let鈥檚 not forget the gun lobby, for whom Wednesday鈥檚 vote was a quiet victory 鈥 and if they have their way, the end of the road for federal gun control.
Said Michael Hammond, legislative counsel for the Virginia-based Gun Owners of America, : 鈥淲e feel confident this will spell the end of gun control for the 113th Congress.鈥