CCW In Wisconsin Sooner Than Later?

If the Washington Post is to be believed, Republicans in the Wisconsin State Legislature are making a major push to pass certain legislation before recall elections scheduled for this summer.

Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker and GOP leaders have launched a push to ram several years’ worth of conservative agenda items through the Legislature this spring before recall elections threaten to end the party’s control of state government.

Republicans, in a rapid sequence of votes over the next eight weeks, plan to legalize concealed weapons, deregulate the telephone industry, require voters to show photo identification at the polls, expand school vouchers and undo an early release for prisoners.

Six Republican State Senators and three Democrats may face recall elections starting in July. A net change of three seats would let the Democrats regains control of the State Senate. Both the recall elections and the time crunch to pass legislation can be attributed to the clash with public employee unions along with the walk-out by Democrat members of the State Senate.

It can be expected that both the Democrat Party and the unions will put lots of money into these recall elections as they did during the recent Wisconsin Supreme Court election between Justice David Prosser and his Democrat challenger JoAnne Kloppenburg. While still undergoing a recount, it looks like Justice Prosser held onto his seat despite the opposition’s money. However, in a local election, it could have more of an impact.

Deconstructing A New York Times Editiorial

Sebastian at Snow Flakes In Hell does an excellent job in deconstructing an anti-gun editorial that appears in today’s print version of the New York Times.

The editorial deals with the so-called “no-fly” list and gun purchases. This is a secret list of supposed terrorists who are banned from flying. You don’t know how you got on the list, don’t know that you are on the list, and usually have no recourse for getting off the list. As you might expect coming from the New York Times, they want to ban anyone who is on this list from being able to purchase a firearm.

As Sebastian notes, he doubts that they would editorialize against any other part of the Bill of Rights in similar fashion. He then provides some examples.

This Is Inspiring

It is incredible to see the spirit and determination of those who are wheelchair-bound. Andrew at Vuurwapen Blog posted this of his friend “Ferris2son” shooting. With a controller that uses a straw and his breath to pull the trigger, “Ferris2son” is able to shoot almost normally.

There are many able-bodied people out there that whine they can’t do this or that. And then there is “Ferris2son” who doesn’t let his physical challenges stop him from participating in a hobby that he loves.

The man is an inspiration.

Gun Banners Harbor Religious Bigots In Their Midst

Since the Brady Campaign loves to mine Facebook postings for negative information about gun rights supporters, turnabout is fair play. The Days of Our Trailers blog reports on this bigotry here along with a screen shot of the page. That page by the way is still up on Facebook.

In a discussion of the state of Utah being ranked a “0” in the latest Brady State Scorecard, one person wonders whether there is a relationship between Mormonism and attitudes towards gun rights. This prompts a response from Andrew Goddard, father of the Brady Campaign’s newest poster boy Colin Goddard, who says:

Steve – watch the spelling mate – the connection is with “Moronism” rather than a strange cult spelled almost the same.

 While I am not a theologian nor am I conversant on all the beliefs of the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Days Saints, I wouldn’t call them a “strange cult”. Indeed, I find their emphasis on family life and on preparedness refreshing in this day and age where all too many rely upon the government to take care of them.

I call upon Sarah Brady and Paul Helmke to repudiate Mr. Goddard’s bigoted statements in the harshest of terms. Failure to do so will mean that they wish to be complicit in the promotion of religious bigotry.

UPDATE: David Codrea devotes his National Gun Rights Examiner column to the Brady Scorecard and the religious intolerance shown on their Facebook page.

Two Hundred!

A mere 37 days after HR 822 – the National Right-To-Carry Reciprocity Bill – hit 100 co-sponsors, the bill now has hit 200 co-sponsors. This makes it the third most co-sponsored bill in the House of Representatives. The only bills that have more co-sponsors deal with tax-payer funding of abortion (HR 3) and the repeal of 1099 filing requirements for small business transactions (HR 4).

I attribute the growth in the number of co-sponsors to Representatives hearing from their constituents. If you look at when significant numbers of co-sponsors sign on to the bill, it is usually within a few days after the House has had a break for members to work in their districts or a recess. For example, the Spring Recess was the last two weeks of April and now in the first week of May there are 29 new co-sponsors.

Breaking down the co-sponsors, you find 16 out of the 25 “official” Blue Dog Democrats are listed as co-sponsors. Of the nine remaining Blue Dogs, five are Californians including Adam Schiff and Loretta Sanchez who have always trended anti-gun. There are a number of other non-Blue Dogs Democrats who have always been pro-gun such as John Dingell (former NRA Board member), Larry Kissell (D-NC), and a number of the Democrats in the Mid-West, Mountain West, and Pennsylvania. Then there was Steve Cohen of Memphis who I wrote about yesterday. I can’t figure out his support but I will take it anyway!

I was pleased to see every Republican and three Democrats from North Carolina listed as co-sponsors of the bill. This leaves the four North Carolina Democrats who rarely see an anti-gun bill that they don’t eventually support.

With the amount of support that this bill has garnered, it is a bit disappointing that the leadership of the House Judiciary Committee and its Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security haven’t moved this bill. Maybe if Chairman Lamar Smith and Subcommittee Chair James Sensenbrenner were less concerned with the PATRIOT Act and kiddie porn and were co-sponsors of this bill, we might get some movement towards hearings on this bill.

Below is the list of those who have signed on as co-sponsors to Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-FL) National Right-To-Carry Reciprocity Act of 2011. If your congressman is not on this, give him or her a call and ask why not. Do this even if they are ardently anti-gun. I remember something that Colleen Lawson – one of the plaintiffs in McDonald v. Chicago – said to me at the NRA Annual Meeting. She said her Illnois State Representative said she and her husband David were the only two that called his office in support of concealed carry in Illinois. Don’t let that happen here.

Alphabetical with date of becoming a co-sponsor

Rep Adams, Sandy [FL-24] – 3/8/2011
Rep Aderholt, Robert B. [AL-4] – 3/29/2011
Rep Akin, W. Todd [MO-2] – 4/13/2011
Rep Alexander, Rodney [LA-5] – 4/7/2011
Rep Altmire, Jason [PA-4] – 3/16/2011
Rep Austria, Steve [OH-7] – 4/14/2011
Rep Baca, Joe [CA-43] – 4/15/2011
Rep Bachmann, Michele [MN-6] – 3/2/2011
Rep Bachus, Spencer [AL-6] – 3/8/2011
Rep Barletta, Lou [PA-11] – 4/13/2011
Rep Barrow, John [GA-12] – 4/13/2011
Rep Bartlett, Roscoe G. [MD-6] – 4/13/2011
Rep Barton, Joe [TX-6] – 3/2/2011
Rep Bass, Charles F. [NH-2] – 5/2/2011
Rep Benishek, Dan [MI-1] – 3/3/2011
Rep Bilbray, Brian P. [CA-50] – 4/15/2011
Rep Bilirakis, Gus M. [FL-9] – 3/11/2011
Rep Bishop, Rob [UT-1] – 4/7/2011
Rep Bishop, Sanford D., Jr. [GA-2] – 3/3/2011
Rep Bonner, Jo [AL-1] – 4/8/2011
Rep Boren, Dan [OK-2] – 3/2/2011
Rep Boswell, Leonard L. [IA-3] – 3/2/2011
Rep Boustany, Charles W., Jr. [LA-7] – 4/14/2011
Rep Brady, Kevin [TX-8] – 4/5/2011
Rep Brooks, Mo [AL-5] – 4/5/2011
Rep Broun, Paul C. [GA-10] – 4/8/2011
Rep Buchanan, Vern [FL-13] – 3/15/2011
Rep Bucshon, Larry [IN-8] – 4/13/2011
Rep Burton, Dan [IN-5] – 3/2/2011
Rep Camp, Dave [MI-4] – 4/4/2011
Rep Canseco, Francisco “Quico” [TX-23] – 3/8/2011
Rep Capito, Shelley Moore [WV-2] – 4/7/2011
Rep Carter, John R. [TX-31] – 3/2/2011
Rep Chabot, Steve [OH-1] – 4/13/2011
Rep Chaffetz, Jason [UT-3] – 3/3/2011
Rep Chandler, Ben [KY-6] – 4/13/2011
Rep Coble, Howard [NC-6] – 5/6/2011
Rep Coffman, Mike [CO-6] – 3/2/2011
Rep Cohen, Steve [TN-9] – 5/2/2011
Rep Cole, Tom [OK-4] – 3/2/2011
Rep Conaway, K. Michael [TX-11] – 4/5/2011
Rep Costello, Jerry F. [IL-12] – 3/11/2011
Rep Cravaack, Chip [MN-8] – 4/15/2011
Rep Crawford, Eric A. “Rick” [AR-1] – 5/3/2011
Rep Crenshaw, Ander [FL-4] – 3/15/2011
Rep Critz, Mark S. [PA-12] – 3/17/2011
Rep Cuellar, Henry [TX-28] – 4/14/2011
Rep Culberson, John Abney [TX-7] – 4/14/2011
Rep Davis, Geoff [KY-4] – 3/3/2011
Rep DeFazio, Peter A. [OR-4] – 4/14/2011
Rep Denham, Jeff [CA-19] – 4/4/2011
Rep Dent, Charles W. [PA-15] – 3/16/2011
Rep DesJarlais, Scott [TN-4] – 4/14/2011
Rep Diaz-Balart, Mario [FL-21] – 3/2/2011
Rep Dingell, John D. [MI-15] – 4/15/2011
Rep Donnelly, Joe [IN-2] – 4/13/2011
Rep Duncan, Jeff [SC-3] – 3/29/2011
Rep Duncan, John J., Jr. [TN-2] – 3/2/2011
Rep Ellmers, Renee L. [NC-2] – 4/5/2011
Rep Emerson, Jo Ann [MO-8] – 3/8/2011
Rep Farenthold, Blake [TX-27] – 4/14/2011
Rep Fitzpatrick, Michael G. [PA-8] – 4/13/2011
Rep Fleming, John [LA-4] – 3/11/2011
Rep Flores, Bill [TX-17] – 4/5/2011
Rep Forbes, J. Randy [VA-4] – 3/29/2011
Rep Foxx, Virginia [NC-5] – 3/8/2011
Rep Franks, Trent [AZ-2] – 3/30/2011
Rep Garrett, Scott [NJ-5] – 3/2/2011
Rep Gibbs, Bob [OH-18] – 3/15/2011
Rep Gibson, Christopher P. [NY-20] – 3/2/2011
Rep Gingrey, Phil [GA-11] – 3/2/2011
Rep Goodlatte, Bob [VA-6] – 5/2/2011
Rep Gosar, Paul A. [AZ-1] – 5/2/2011
Rep Gowdy, Trey [SC-4] – 5/6/2011
Rep Granger, Kay [TX-12] – 3/3/2011
Rep Graves, Sam [MO-6] – 3/2/2011
Rep Graves, Tom [GA-9] – 5/2/2011
Rep Green, Gene [TX-29] – 3/10/2011
Rep Griffin, Tim [AR-2] – 5/2/2011
Rep Griffith, H. Morgan [VA-9] – 3/15/2011
Rep Guinta, Frank C. [NH-1] – 4/5/2011
Rep Guthrie, Brett [KY-2] – 4/13/2011
Rep Hall, Ralph M. [TX-4] – 3/3/2011
Rep Hanna, Richard L. [NY-24] – 4/15/2011
Rep Harper, Gregg [MS-3] – 4/14/2011
Rep Harris, Andy [MD-1] – 3/10/2011
Rep Hartzler, Vicky [MO-4] – 5/5/2011
Rep Heck, Joseph J. [NV-3] – 3/30/2011
Rep Heinrich, Martin [NM-1] – 3/3/2011
Rep Heller, Dean [NV-2] – 3/2/2011
Rep Hensarling, Jeb [TX-5] – 3/30/2011
Rep Herger, Wally [CA-2] – 3/3/2011
Rep Holden, Tim [PA-17] – 3/3/2011
Rep Huelskamp, Tim [KS-1] – 3/2/2011
Rep Hultgren, Randy [IL-14] – 5/2/2011
Rep Hunter, Duncan D. [CA-52] – 3/29/2011
Rep Jenkins, Lynn [KS-2] – 3/8/2011
Rep Johnson, Bill [OH-6] – 4/13/2011
Rep Johnson, Sam [TX-3] – 3/14/2011
Rep Johnson, Timothy V. [IL-15] – 3/3/2011
Rep Jones, Walter B., Jr. [NC-3] – 4/7/2011
Rep Jordan, Jim [OH-4] – 3/11/2011
Rep Kelly, Mike [PA-3] – 4/8/2011
Rep Kind, Ron [WI-3] – 4/13/2011
Rep Kinzinger, Adam [IL-11] – 3/14/2011
Rep Kissell, Larry [NC-8] – 3/3/2011
Rep Kline, John [MN-2] – 3/8/2011
Rep Labrador, Raul R. [ID-1] – 5/2/2011
Rep Lamborn, Doug [CO-5] – 3/2/2011
Rep Landry, Jeffrey M. [LA-3] – 4/13/2011
Rep Lankford, James [OK-5] – 5/2/2011
Rep Larsen, Rick [WA-2] – 5/2/2011
Rep Latham, Tom [IA-4] – 3/8/2011
Rep LaTourette, Steven C. [OH-14] – 4/13/2011
Rep Latta, Robert E. [OH-5] – 3/14/2011
Rep Long, Billy [MO-7] – 4/14/2011
Rep Lucas, Frank D. [OK-3] – 4/4/2011
Rep Luetkemeyer, Blaine [MO-9] – 3/29/2011
Rep Lujan, Ben Ray [NM-3] – 4/8/2011
Rep Mack, Connie [FL-14] – 4/7/2011
Rep Marchant, Kenny [TX-24] – 4/5/2011
Rep Marino, Tom [PA-10] – 4/15/2011
Rep Matheson, Jim [UT-2] – 4/14/2011
Rep McCaul, Michael T. [TX-10] – 4/14/2011
Rep McClintock, Tom [CA-4] – 5/2/2011
Rep McCotter, Thaddeus G. [MI-11] – 3/8/2011
Rep McHenry, Patrick T. [NC-10] – 5/2/2011
Rep McIntyre, Mike [NC-7] – 3/8/2011
Rep McKinley, David B. [WV-1] – 4/4/2011
Rep Mica, John L. [FL-7] – 3/3/2011
Rep Michaud, Michael H. [ME-2] – 4/14/2011
Rep Miller, Candice S. [MI-10] – 3/16/2011
Rep Miller, Gary G. [CA-42] – 3/3/2011
Rep Miller, Jeff [FL-1] – 3/2/2011
Rep Mulvaney, Mick [SC-5] – 3/8/2011
Rep Murphy, Tim [PA-18] – 4/5/2011
Rep Myrick, Sue Wilkins [NC-9] – 5/2/2011
Rep Neugebauer, Randy [TX-19] – 4/14/2011
Rep Nugent, Richard [FL-5] – 3/17/2011
Rep Nunnelee, Alan [MS-1] – 5/2/2011
Rep Olson, Pete [TX-22] – 4/13/2011
Rep Owens, William L. [NY-23] – 3/2/2011
Rep Palazzo, Steven M. [MS-4] – 3/15/2011
Rep Pence, Mike [IN-6] – 3/2/2011
Rep Peterson, Collin C. [MN-7] – 3/3/2011
Rep Petri, Thomas E. [WI-6] – 3/8/2011
Rep Platts, Todd Russell [PA-19] – 3/29/2011
Rep Poe, Ted [TX-2] – 3/29/2011
Rep Pompeo, Mike [KS-4] – 3/17/2011
Rep Posey, Bill [FL-15] – 3/3/2011
Rep Rahall, Nick J., II [WV-3] – 3/3/2011
Rep Reed, Tom [NY-29] – 4/4/2011
Rep Rehberg, Denny [MT] – 4/8/2011
Rep Renacci, James B. [OH-16] – 5/2/2011
Rep Rigell, E. Scott [VA-2] – 5/3/2011
Rep Rivera, David [FL-25] – 3/11/2011
Rep Roby, Martha [AL-2] – 5/3/2011
Rep Roe, David P. [TN-1] – 4/14/2011
Rep Rogers, Harold [KY-5] – 5/5/2011
Rep Rogers, Mike D. [AL-3] – 3/2/2011
Rep Rogers, Mike J. [MI-8] – 3/14/2011
Rep Rokita, Todd [IN-4] – 5/5/2011
Rep Rooney, Thomas J. [FL-16] – 4/7/2011
Rep Ros-Lehtinen, Ileana [FL-18] – 4/8/2011
Rep Ross, Dennis [FL-12] – 3/11/2011
Rep Ross, Mike [AR-4] – 3/2/2011
Rep Ryan, Tim [OH-17] – 4/4/2011
Rep Scalise, Steve [LA-1] – 3/29/2011
Rep Schilling, Robert T. [IL-17] – 4/14/2011
Rep Schmidt, Jean [OH-2] – 3/2/2011
Rep Schock, Aaron [IL-18] – 3/29/2011
Rep Schweikert, David [AZ-5] – 4/15/2011
Rep Scott, Austin [GA-8] – 5/5/2011
Rep Scott, Tim [SC-1] – 5/2/2011
Rep Sessions, Pete [TX-32] – 4/7/2011
Rep Shuler, Heath [NC-11] – 2/18/2011
Rep Shuster, Bill [PA-9] – 4/4/2011
Rep Smith, Adrian [NE-3] – 4/14/2011
Rep Southerland, Steve [FL-2] – 5/5/2011
Rep Stivers, Steve [OH-15] – 4/13/2011
Rep Stutzman, Marlin A. [IN-3] – 5/6/2011
Rep Sullivan, John [OK-1] – 3/29/2011
Rep Terry, Lee [NE-2] – 3/30/2011
Rep Thompson, Glenn [PA-5] – 4/5/2011
Rep Thornberry, Mac [TX-13] – 3/16/2011
Rep Tiberi, Patrick J. [OH-12] – 3/16/2011
Rep Tipton, Scott [CO-3] – 5/2/2011
Rep Turner, Michael R. [OH-3] – 3/8/2011
Rep Walden, Greg [OR-2] – 5/2/2011
Rep Walsh, Joe [IL-8] – 4/15/2011
Rep Walz, Timothy J. [MN-1] – 3/29/2011
Rep West, Allen B. [FL-22] – 3/3/2011
Rep Westmoreland, Lynn A. [GA-3] – 3/2/2011
Rep Whitfield, Ed [KY-1] – 4/14/2011
Rep Wilson, Joe [SC-2] – 3/8/2011
Rep Wittman, Robert J. [VA-1] – 3/10/2011
Rep Wolf, Frank R. [VA-10] – 3/30/2011
Rep Yoder, Kevin [KS-3] – 4/8/2011
Rep Young, Don [AK] – 3/2/2011
Rep Young, Todd C. [IN-9] – 3/30/2011

Always Whining About Something

I hate to say it but Paul Helmke, President of the Brady Campaign, is a whiny loser. The press release below is because NRA News sent a cameraman to the Brady Campaign’s press conference where they announced their state “score cards”. That cameraman doubled the attendance at the press conference. What really must get Mr. Helmke is the realization that the media, though openly sympathetic to gun control, considers the Brady Campaign irrelevant.

In yet another sign of how out of touch it is with how people interact in a civilized society, the National Rifle Association is apparently so wrapped up in its paranoid view of the world that it planted an undercover cameraman at our news conference at the National Press Club on Wednesday when the Brady Campaign released its annual Scorecard of State gun laws that can help reduce gun violence.

This is not the first outrageous NRA attempt to spy on us when they’ve been worried that our information might dampen support for its pro-gun agenda.

A few years ago, the corporate spy Mary McFate, also known as Mary Lou Sapone, tried to campaign and then talk her way onto the Brady Board. She failed to get nominated or elected to a board seat. McFate was later outed in 2008 by Mother Jones magazine as an NRA mole who spent a decade starting in the late 1990s infiltrating various national gun violence prevention groups.

On Wednesday, when the undercover NRA cameraman came to our news event, he lied and said he represented CBS. He claimed his name was Julio Luzquinos, but we cannot verify it. The phone number he listed is a non-working number and a D.C. assignment editor for CBS News said it doesn’t have anyone by that name working for it.

A few hours after the news conference, a host on NRANews.com bragged on Twitter that NRANews had a cameraman at the Brady Campaign news event. Footage from the news conference was quickly posted onto the NRA website.

I don’t know how much the undercover poser was paid to sneak into our news conference, but it certainly was too much. If the NRA had called us, we probably would have invited him in for free. I’ve done interviews before for NRA cameras and have no problem making my points to most anyone who asks.

We want the NRA bosses and their backers to hear how their reckless push to undo or prevent sensible gun safety laws puts communities at risk. We urge them to take the information from our news conferences and disseminate it widely to their supporters and friends. It is no secret to millions of Americans that – after years of NRA efforts pushing more guns into more places – gun violence threatens their lives. The facts, as presented at Wednesday’s news conference on state laws, don’t lie.

California topped the Brady Campaign State Scorecard, earning 80 of 100 points for its strong efforts to protect its citizens from gun violence. It also has one of the lowest gun-related death rates – 33rd in the nation – according to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The next five highest ranked states on our Scorecard finished 45th, 46th, 47th, 48th and 50th for rate of gun deaths. Perhaps, this is the information that the NRA fears getting out.

Gun safety laws help prevent gun violence. Weak gun laws simply make it easier for dangerous people to get firearms and destroy lives. Because strong laws in one state can be undermined by weak laws in neighboring states, we need action at the federal level as well as the state level to protect the public.

We remain horrified that a young Arizona man who was clearly unstable suspected was able to easily buy a large-capacity ammunition magazine and the gun he used to kill six people and wound 13 others, including Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson on January 8. Yet, it is chilling that there are no laws in Arizona that might prevent a similar tragedy from occurring again.

As the Brady Campaign State Scorecard shows, Arizona has the weakest gun safety laws in the nation, earning a “0″ score along with Alaska and Utah. Everything that the Tucson mass shooter did up until he pulled the trigger at Giffords’ constituency outreach event was legal.

Arizona does not ban, as most top-ranked states do, the purchase of ammunition clips capable of firing multiple rounds. The shooter fired 32 times in 15 seconds.

Loaded concealed weapons can be carried by anyone without a permit in Arizona, so the shooter was able to take a handgun into the midst of a public gathering without anyone seeing the threat coming.

Arizona’s weak background checks and poor record-keeping requirements make it difficult to identify and block people who exhibit behavior that would raise questions on whether they should be permitted to own a firearm or buy ammunition that would allow them to quickly target multiple people.

The NRA bosses pretend such shootings are unrelated to easy access to guns and weak regulations. But there is a connection. Arizona has the worst gun laws in the country and one of the highest gun-related death rates – 9th.

This correlation is also seen in other states that adhere to the NRA agenda of putting more guns and ammunition within easy reach. Alaska, another “0″ state on the Brady Scorecard, has the third-highest gun death rate in the country. The other top five states with high gun death rates – Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Nevada – also ranked in the bottom for gun regulations on the Brady Scorecard.

The NRA, for some reason, didn’t choose to air those substantive parts of our news conference, instead just showing some of my opening statements and then putting its own spin on things. The information we presented does not work to the NRA’s advantage. The numbers clearly shows that weak gun laws make citizens vulnerable to gun violence. Polls show Americans want more common sense gun laws, not the free-for-all the NRA promotes.

The NRA doesn’t need to resort to its sneaky tactics of “gotcha TV” to get our information. It’s news we want and need to get it out. We urge lawmakers to take notice, too, of the connection between weak gun regulations and gun deaths – then act to do what most Americans want done. We need a strong background check system, restrictions on assault clips and military-style weapons, more support for law enforcement and other laws that have been shown to make people less vulnerable to gun violence.

###

All I would say in response to Mr. Helmke is w-AH.

Don’t Always Judge A Book By Its Cover

Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN-9) represents the Memphis area in Congress. His Congressional district is majority African-American and is considered one of the safest Democratic seats in the country. A win in the Democratic primary is tantamount to winning the election.

Cohen is also extremely liberal. According to the website, ProgressivePunch.org, his lifetime score is 95.84% which puts him ahead of such liberal icons as Nancy Pelosi and the Queen Bee of Gun Control, Carolyn McCarthy. It is hard to find anyone more liberal than Cohen and he tends to wear his politics on his sleeve. Indeed, Cohen caused a stir back in January when he said “Republicans are like Nazis” when discussing healthcare.

Unsurprisingly, Cohen is listed as one of the co-sponsors for Rep. Carolyn McCarthy’s HR 308 which seeks to ban standard capacity magazines and eliminates the grandfathering that the Clinton-era AWB had.

So you can imagine my surprise when I was checking the co-sponsors of HR 822 – the National Right-to-Carry Reciprocity Bill – and saw his name listed as becoming a co-sponsor this week.

I don’t know how and I don’t why he decided to become a co-sponsor but I certainly welcome his support. It may have something to do with his comments after the Tucson shooting when he said he was planning to apply for his Tennessee CCW permit. According to the Memphis Commercial-Appeal, Cohen did vote for right to carry legislation as a State Senator and has said he owns a pistol. I might even suggest he contact Tom Givens at RangeMaster for his CCW permit training.

The upshot of all of this is that sometimes strange and unusual coalitions can form around gun rights legislation. It is a mistake to think that all Democrats and all liberals are for each and every gun control measure put forth. Sometimes they are and and sometimes they aren’t.

As to HR 822, it now has 197 co-sponsors including 26 more so far this week. The leading gun control measure, HR 308, is stuck at 107.

ISRA Exec. Director On Concealed Carry Vote

Richard Pearson is the Executive Director of the Illinois State Rifle Association. He has spent many years in Springfield fighting for gun rights in the state of Illinois. He released this statement late last night on the failure of HB-148 – the Illinois concealed carry bill – to get the super-majority needed.

5 May 2011

I know you are all down in the dumps about today’s vote but you should not be. I’m not saying you should be happy either. Be pragmatic. That will be hard for everyone on our side of this issue, I realize.

We put 68 votes on the board our first time out. That is great. I know in the end we wound up with 65 and we needed 71. The Mayor and the Governor were threatening everyone they could and we only missed by a few votes. We had promises that weren’t kept, because the threats from the mayor carried more weight than we could deliver, today.

That’s life in Springfield. I know many of you and many of our members see things in black and white. If you ever come across anything in Springfield that is either pure white or completely black run away as fast as you can. It’s a trap. Ask some of our former Governors!

We know who voted one way or the other and why. We will take care of it. I’m not saying that some people shouldn’t be put in the spot light, but not all should because that will solidify their position against us. Some need to be finessed.

If there were a few legislators that need to be in the spotlight, Farnham, Crespo, and Monique Davis would be the three that I would pick.

So where are we? The bill was put on postponed consideration. That means it can be called anytime between now and the second Wednesday in 2013. Now that we have probed and found out the weak spots we can begin working on the bill again.

Firearm owners in Illinois are not the second class citizens Mayor Daley makes us out to be. He asked today for a publicly funded protection detail, once he is retired! Once he is retired, he is a common citizen just like the rest of us. I can’t get the state of Illinois or my city to provide me with armed guards to watch out for me and neither should he.

Fox News Chicago reported this evening that NRA will file a law suit against the state of Illinois and there will be NO input from the Legislature once litigation commences. I am not sure what their sources are, but it was alluded to during the closing statement at the end of debate.

Representative Phelps put a lot of work into this bill. He invited all sides in to negotiate any issues they had with the bill. Conspicuously absent from those discussions was the city of Chicago. They were invited, but never even gave the courtesy of a response.

ISRA Members and our supporters are not quitters and we’re not done. Adversity makes us stronger! We WILL WIN THIS!

Wisconsin Legislature Begins Efforts On Concealed Carry

The NRA-ILA has just released information on two concealed carry bills that are due to be introduced into the Wisconsin legislature. One will allow a Vermont or Arizona style constitutional carry. The other is a “shall issue” concealed carry permit.

Wisconsin: The 2011 Personal Protection Act Has Arrived!
Committee Hearings Have Been Scheduled for Next Thursday!

Thursday, May 05, 2011

Now is Time for You to Act!

The good citizens of Wisconsin have been denied their right to self-defense for too long and the time has now come to make the Personal Protection Act a reality! It is time that Wisconsin joins Free America and the 48 other states with concealed carry laws. The bills have been circulated for sponsorship and it is critical that you contact your state Representative and state Senator to urge them to cosponsor this legislation.

There are two bills being introduced in the 2011 legislative session that allow Wisconsinites to carry concealed weapons for personal protection. The first is known as “permitless carry” and it simply eliminates the current prohibition against law-abiding citizens carrying concealed firearms. Many citizens already carry openly and this will allow them to conceal their firearms. It also eliminates the “cased and unloaded” requirement for handguns in motor vehicles. State Senator Pam Galloway (R-Wausau) has introduced this bill in the Senate and there is currently no companion bill in the Assembly. Its designation before assigned a bill number is LRB 2007 and both senators and representatives are able to cosponsor it.

The second is a “shall issue” carry license bill that allows Wisconsinites to obtain a license from the state Department of Justice (DOJ) in order to carry a concealed weapon. This license bill offers some additional benefits. These include the ability to use the license to carry a concealed weapon in many other states while traveling and the ability to carry concealed weapons in school zones (1000-foot area surrounding school grounds). These zones are prolific and it is virtually impossible to navigate populated areas without entering them while engaging in routine activities. The federal penalty for a school zone violation is up to five years in prison and a fine. State Senator Pam Galloway (R-Wausau) and state Representative Jeffrey Mursau (R-Crivitz) are the sponsors of this bill. The current Senate Bill designation is LRB 2027 and the Assembly Bill is LRB 2033.

When contacting your state legislators to request that they cosponsor the Personal Protection Act, please also ask them to oppose any amendments that restrict your ability to defend yourself or place unnecessary hurdles in the process required to obtain a concealed weapons license. Too many legislators are acting as if there are not 48 other states with such concealed carry laws and that there is no way of determining what works and what does not. The time for guessing has ended!

We have provided two documents that will further inform you about this fight for your rights. One is a summary of the bills, with details regarding the “shall issue” carry license bill, and the other is a comprehensive Questions and Answers document

A search of the Wisconsin legislature’s website does not yet list either bill. I believe that is because they are being circulated to obtain sponsors and co-sponsors.

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