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INHOFE
SUPPORTS CONCEALED WEAPONS AMENDMENT
WASHINGTON, DC
Today, U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) made
the following comments after voting in
support of an amendment to the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2010 that would allow individuals with
concealed carry permits to lawfully carry
concealed firearms across state lines as
long as the laws of the host state are
obeyed. The amendment, S.Amdt.1618
introduced by Senator John Thune (R-SD), was
defeated by a vote of 58 to 39.
The deterrent
effect on crime of the individual right to
possess a firearm is greatly enhanced when
we allow law-abiding citizens to carry
concealed weapons, said Inhofe. That
is why forty-eight states have adopted
concealed carry permit laws. Unfortunately,
there is no uniform system of reciprocity in
America that allows gun owners to utilize
their concealed carry permits in another
state. Senator Thunes amendment would have
done this, while still ensuring that the
permit holders comply with the laws and
restrictions of the state in which they are
traveling. I was extremely disappointed
that the Senate today fell just two votes
short of furthering the right of individuals
to protect themselves and their families.
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NRA threats on Sotomayor met
with shrugs
WASHINGTON The National Rifle Association''s threat to
punish senators who vote for Supreme Court nominee Sonia
Sotomayor has been met with a shrug by Democrats from
conservative-leaning states and some Republicans who are
breaking with their party to support her.
The gun rights group is used to getting its way by spooking
lawmakers about the political consequences of defying its
wishes. But it never before has weighed in on a Supreme
Court confirmation battle. It was cautious about breaking
that pattern, and it looks like a losing a fight to defeat
President Barack Obama''s first pick for the court.
Sotomayor is expected to easily win confirmation in a vote
this coming week that could deflate the long-accepted truism
in Washington that you don''t cross the NRA.
Voting "yes" will include A-plus-rated and NRA-endorsed
Democratic Sen. Max Baucus and his fellow Montanan, A-rated
Sen. Jon Tester, as well as A-rated and NRA-endorsed
Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander, the only GOP leader to break
with the rest of this party to back Sotomayor.
That''s not to say that the NRA''s late decision to wade in
hasn''t had an impact.
Many Republicans who were considered possible "yes" votes
for Sotomayor including Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch, Georgia
Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson, and Texas Sen. Kay
Bailey Hutchison have come out against her after the
NRA''s announcement, citing gun rights concerns as an
important reason.
Some Democrats who have high NRA ratings, including Alaska
Sen. Mark Begich and Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson, are on the
fence.
Still, the NRA''s threats seem to hold less potency on this
vote. Asked whether he was worried about ruining his perfect
NRA score and endorsement by opting to vote for Sotomayor,
Nelson paused and said with a smile, "I''d probably have a
good rating regardless."
The NRA derives much of its considerable clout from what has
become a kind of mantra on Capitol Hill: Defy the gun lobby
on something it cares about and face recriminations at the
polls; back it and enjoy a substantial political boost.
It''s something of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Lawmakers
generally are terrified to test it, and the NRA is
politically savvy about which issues it takes on. Its
won-loss record adds to its reputation as untouchable.
So why would the gun lobby risk undercutting its clout by
stepping into this Supreme Court debate?
GOP leaders, particularly Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky,
the Senate''s top Republican, helped forced the group''s
hand.
At the conclusion of the Senate Judiciary confirmation
hearing for Sotomayor two weeks ago, the NRA came out in
opposition to her, calling her "hostile" to the Second
Amendment right to bear arms. But it stopped short of saying
it would include the vote on her confirmation in its
political ratings.
In a later meeting on Capitol Hill with Republican senators
and conservative activists, McConnell asked if the group
planned to "score" the confirmation vote. The NRA was
noncommittal.
Accounts of the meeting vary, and McConnell''s aides deny
that he leaned on the NRA to rate the Sotomayor vote. But
others present or briefed later on the session said it was
clear that McConnell and other leaders wanted the NRA''s
scorekeeping. They spoke on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorize to detail the private exchange.
One key player who has closely tracked the nomination said
Republican leaders had been pressing the gun lobby for weeks
to make the vote on Sotomayor a priority.
"Republican leaders reminded them that if they don''t care
about judges, they should," said Curt Levey of the
conservative Committee for Justice. "For 130 years, the NRA
could be effective by focusing on legislation, but now,
after last year''s Supreme Court decision in Heller, this
issue is in the courts pretty much like abortion was after
Roe v. Wade."
In the Heller case, the Supreme Court last year struck down
the District of Columbia''s handgun ban and held that
individuals have a constitutional right to guns. But it was
a narrow ruling that the court didn''t apply to states''
controls on guns.
The NRA says it sat on the fence for so long on Sotomayor
because its leaders wanted to give her the opportunity to
reassure gun rights supporters during her confirmation
hearings about her views on the issue.
In her testimony, Sotomayor declined to call gun rights
"fundamental" meaning that they apply to states as well as
the federal government although she said she''d have an
open mind on the issue if it came before the court.
As a federal appeals court judge, Sotomayor was part of a
panel that ruled this year that the Second Amendment
doesn''t limit state controls on guns only federal ones.
That was in keeping with a 19th Century Supreme Court
precedent and subsequent appellate court rulings.
"The simple fact is that as far as this nominee is
concerned, she has a track record on Second Amendment
issues, and it''s one that is of great concern to us," said
Andrew Arulanandam, an NRA spokesman. "We wanted to give the
nominee a chance to respond, but after four days of
testimony, none of the concerns we had about Judge Sotomayor
were dispelled in fact, based on some of her responses,
our concerns increased."
But by the time the NRA announced it would score her
confirmation vote, several senators it rates highly had
already come out in Sotomayor''s favor, including Republican
Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Democratic Sens.
Tim Johnson of South Dakota and Mark Warner of Virginia.
In the days since, other senators have inquired privately as
to how much they could hurt themselves by supporting
Sotomayor, only to be given an ambiguous answer: It''s too
early to tell.
H.R.45 - Blair Holt's Firearm Licensing and Record
of Sale Act of 2009 (Introduced in House).
Blair Holt's Firearm Licensing and Record
of Sale Act of 2009 - Amends the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act
to prohibit a person from possessing a firearm unless that person has
been issued a firearm license under this Act or a state system certified
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