We’ve noted before that both parties seem to be making
calculated moves in an attempt to become less popular with voters in advance of
the midterm elections. Now two Democrats, who were apparently worried that some
gun owners might not vote Republican, have proposed a national gun registry.
Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) introduced the Blair Holt Firearm
Licensing and Record of Sale Act in the House and Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.)
introduced a companion bill in the Senate. The Washington Examiner reports that the bill would make
it illegal to own an unlicensed gun and would require a firearms license and
federal background checks for all sales and transfers of guns. The bill would
also require the attorney general to create a federal system to record gun
purchases.
The bill is one of several gun control proposals named for Chicago
honor student, Blair
Holt, who was murdered in 2008. Chicago has some of the toughest gun laws
in the country as well as one of the highest crime rates.
Rush’s office claims that the gun registry would protect the
public from “unreasonable risk of injury and death” from private gun sales.
Second Amendment advocates would also point out that a gun registry would make
gun confiscation easier in the event of a ban. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Cal.) proposed
such a ban just last month.
Gun owners have nothing to fear from the Democratic
proposals. With Republicans in control of both houses of Congress, most gun
control bills are dead on arrival. An exception would be the bump stock ban
being pushed
by President Trump and many Democrats.
Even a large number of Democrats from conservative-leaning
states would oppose strict new gun laws. It’s fitting that the new anti-gun
proposals originate with members of Congress from California and Illinois, two
of the states most out of touch with the rest of the country with respect to
gun rights.
In spite of the recent school shootings, guns registered a
distant third on a recent NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll behind health care and jobs/economy. Only 13
percent of voters considered guns the most important issue. There was no
breakdown between the pro- and anti-gun factions in the poll.
The largest impact of the Democrat bill will be to mobilize
gun owners to resist the attempt to erode gun rights. Democratic proposals that
confirm the worst fears of gun owners will drive Second Amendment voters to the
polls where defending Donald Trump might not.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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