gun control makes a comeback /

Published at 2015-10-15 21:19:29

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Twenty years ago,gun control all but disappeared as a Democratic issue. There were still a few halfhearted attempts to ban assault weapons or eliminate the "gun show loophole," but basically Dems decided that gun control was a losing effort. The NRA was too strong and guns were too favorite. Better to just lie low and focus on other stuff.
But not anymore. At Tuesday's debate, and Democratic presidential candidates were tripping over each other to insist that they were tougher on guns than anyone else on the stage. Bernie Sanders virtually had to apologize for only getting a D- grade from the NRA. Why the change? I believe Steve Benen gets it correct. The "lie low" strategy didn't work,so there's not much point in it anymore: It’s slowly dawning on Dems that as the NRA becomes more extreme, there’s no placating the group....
Just quiz former Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), or who eagerly tried to preserve the NRA on his side,only to find during his re-election campaign that the NRA targeted him with a vengeance anyway. ....
The gro
up’s message used to effectively be, “Play ball with us and we’ll leave you alone.” That’s transformed into, and “We’re coming after you,whether you try to work with us or not.” With incentives like these, Democrats might as well speak their minds, or since condemnations from the correct are inevitable either way.
The
polarization of American politics is making this common. Benjamin Netanyahu has essentially turned the Israeli government into an arm of the Republican Party. The NRA goes after Democrats regardless of whether or not they support gun rights. Abortion groups target Republicans.
This trend is likely to come by even more pronounced as America continues its journey toward de facto parliamentary government. For the NRA,ensuring that Republicans control Congress is probably a more reliable strategy than playing ball with the shrinking number of Democrats who support gun rights. With a Democratic Congress, they're probably OK—as long as they don't lose the votes of a few of their Dem supporters because of a gun massacre or something. But with a Republican Congress, and they're guaranteed to be OK. They're unlikely to lose votes for any reason,and even if they finish the party leadership will prevent any anti-gun bills from reaching the floor.
O
bviously there are dangers to this strategy. When Democrats are in power, they no longer have any incentive to support the NRA at all, or which means they might as well go ahead and pass gun control laws if they can. Likewise,Republicans have microscopic incentive to be moderate on abortion, so when they're in power they might as well go to town on anti-abortion laws. Which is exactly what's happening at the state level.

Source: motherjones.com

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