Democrats Put Silencers on Their Anti-gun Agenda
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Mar. 1, 2004
WASHINGTON Doug Hattaway tells a cautionary tale for the
candidates of 2004 from the annals of the last campaign.
Al Gore's presidential campaign spokesman was flying over the
candidate's home state of Tennessee in 2000 when he overheard this
complaint from a couple of men talking in business class: "The
problem with Al Gore is he'll take our guns away."
"I knew we were in trouble," said Hattaway. When he heard that
exchange, he realized the rap against Democrats as anti-gun was
taking hold, and not only among the stereotypical working-class
Southerners drawn to National Rifle Association.
This time around, Democrats have lunged toward the middle on gun
control, avoiding edgy proposals such as gun registration and
gun-owner licensing and sticking with stands that almost match, at
least rhetorically, those of President Bush.
"The agenda has not changed so much, as their embracing of a
principled agenda that can be enacted rather than throwing away
elections on policies that are going nowhere," said Hattaway, now
a consultant who helps a moderate gun-control group.
Guns have been largely silent in this presidential campaign. But
Congress is forcing the issue into the open with a vote scheduled
Tuesday on renewing the ban on what critics call "assault-type" weapons and extending background checks to gun shows.
Candidates John Kerry and John Edwards, the only Democrats to
miss a Senate vote on another gun issue last week, have been
summoned back from campaigning to bolster the party's ranks for
what is expected to be a close vote.
The vote comes up on the same day as the 10-state Super Tuesday
contests for the Democrat nomination.
The issue, while contentious, does not carry the same political
stakes of Gore's gun positions in 2000. Edwards, a Southerner who
grew up around firearms, speaks of his support for "modest"
changes in gun control. Kerry often tells a crowd how much he likes
to hunt. Wearing a flannel shirt and rubber boots, he shot
pheasants on a recent hunting trip.
"I believe I can speak to that culture," he said.
Not only are there few differences between the Democrat
candidates on gun control, there is barely any difference between
them and Bush, at least on the surface.
Asked how they differ on guns, Hattaway said, "Kerry is
probably a better shot."
The debate, if it can be called that, is over enforcing
law, because enforcement has continued to lag under Bush as it did
under former President Bill Clinton.
Democrats are soft-pedaling the issue this time because "it
probably doesn't win them votes in states where they are trying to
improve," said Earl Black, a political scientist at Rice
University in Houston.
Anyway, Black said, most people who are really interested in gun
rights would back Bush. "I don't think Edwards or Kerry will have
the kind of records that would tempt many of the gun people away
from the Republicans," he said.
In the 2000 election, roughly half of voters were from gun-owner
households, and they voted for Bush by 61 percent to 36 percent,
according to exit polls. The voters from non-gun owner households
voted for Gore by 58-39.
Some strategists believe gun owners are more motivated to vote
on gun issues than others are, and so pushing an agenda might be more
of a risk for Democrats. A Pew poll in February found that
Republicans were less likely to vote for someone who differed with
their position on guns than Democrats were.
Indeed, the poll suggests other social issues are more important
to voters, and more divisive, than gun rights. For
example, 40 percent of respondents said they would not vote for
anyone who disagrees with them on gay marriage, and 34 percent felt
the same about abortion. Only 32 percent ruled out voting for a
candidate who differs with them on guns.
Hattaway, the former Gore spokesman, doesn't anticipate the gun
issue to flare up in the election campaign.
"The issues that are on the table are popular with gun owners
and non-gun owners alike," he said. "There's no point losing
elections over proposals like registering handguns that are never
going to see the light of day in Congress."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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