The big news over the weekend was that the logjam on guns seems to have been broken in the Senate. On Sunday, a bipartisan group of senators announced a framework for a deal to address some pressing concerns in the battle against shooting sprees and mass murders. The group is significant because the Gang of 20 (as I’m sure they will be dubbed) contains 10 Republicans, which is enough to break a filibuster.
Funding to help states implement or improve red flag laws
Funding for mental health and suicide prevention programs
Closing the “boyfriend loophole” to stipulate that people in relationships that did not include marriage, children, or cohabitation be banned from owning guns if they are convicted of domestic violence
Including juvenile mental health and legal records as part of background checks for prospective gun buyers from 18-21 years old
Expanding the scope of businesses that are required to be licensed as firearms dealers, which would require these businesses to conduct background checks
More funding for school security and violence prevention in schools
All in all, the framework seems to be a good compromise that addresses the ability of high-risk individuals to obtain guns while preserving the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding gun owners. The devil may emerge in the details as the bill is written, but the proposal seems reasonable at this stage.
The agreement is as notable for what it does not contain as for what it does. There is no attempt at an “assault weapons” ban or an increase to the age requirement for purchasing an AR-style rifle. There is also no attempt to ban or confiscate weapons more generally. Therein may lie the rub.
If the Republicans remain in the Gang of 20 as the bill is written and winds its way through Congress, the legislation may come under attack from the left. Progressives such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez may find the compromise uninspiring in that it doesn’t go far enough. There may be Democrats who hold out for an “assault weapons” ban even though that bill would surely go down in flames.
Often in Congress, the perfect is the enemy of the good. Stalwarts in both parties reject compromises as imperfect and vote them down in favor of “perfect” bills that can never pass. This is choosing to do nothing. Such a choice keeps the problem alive and also preserves donations from interest groups and voters. There is money to be made in not solving America’s problems.
On the other hand, some in Congress realize that a partisan wish list isn’t going to become law in a closely divided Congress and that baby steps are better than no steps. The Democrats should have learned this lesson with the failure of the partisan Build Back Better bill. They should have learned this lesson, but I’m not sure that they have.
Still, the Democrats are less than five months away from a shellacking in this year’s midterms. As Samuel Johnson once wrote, “When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.”
Democrats need a victory heading into the election and the gun compromise could provide it. If, that is, the wrangling between the progressives and the Joe Manchin - Kyrsten Sinema bloc does not scuttle the deal.
I’m not under any illusion that the compromise will end mass killing sprees, but it is a step in the right direction. Hopefully, the deal will survive the process of being written into a bill and eventually become law. It would be a refreshing change to see the government work as it is supposed to for a change and in this case, it might just save both innocent lives as well as our Second Amendment rights.
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