In the wake of the Supreme Court’s Heller ruling on gun control, Republicans are optimistic that they’ll be able to put guns back on the political world’s front-burner, and make the 2nd Amendment a key campaign issue this November.
“The gun issue is not going away,” said Tucker Bounds, a spokesman for Sen. John McCain (Ariz.), the Republican presidential candidate. “We are going to drive it. We are going to keep talking about this issue.”
Republicans will be aided by the National Rifle Association, which promises to do “everything” it can to hit Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama (Ill.) on the issue…. “This case is galvanizing gun owners,” [NRA executive director Chris Cox] said. “The fight truly just starts now.”
Congressional Republicans also hope to benefit. The National Republican Congressional Committee sent out a release Thursday targeting Democrats in competitive House races who did not sign an amicus brief opposed to the gun ban. Fifty-five senators, including McCain, but not Obama, signed the brief, along with 250 House members.
I suppose the motivation is obvious enough. Republicans don’t have a lot of issues that a) they’re anxious to talk about; b) put Dems on the defensive; and c) generate excitement with the GOP base.
What I’m less sure about is what, exactly, Republicans and the NRA are going to say about the issue. They won — the Supreme Court ruled their way, and Democrats have effectively given up talking about gun control altogether. So what is there to campaign on?
If the 5-4 Supreme Court ruling had gone the other way, then sure, I could see this being a galvanizing issue for the right. The NRA could redouble its efforts to prevent other locales from following DC’s lead.
But that’s not what happened. The Supreme Court overturned DC’s ban (which is what Republicans wanted) and said firearm ownership is an individual right, not a collective right (which is also what Republicans wanted).
What’s the campaign message? Maybe Republicans could go after Dems who disagreed with the ruling, but what’s the point? If conservatives got the result they were looking for, what difference does it make if some hoped the ruling would go the other way? The law, at this point, is the law. Usually, one campaigns to ask for what they want. In this case, Republicans and the NRA already got what they want, and no one’s trying to take it away.
Given this, the Supreme Court didn’t give conservatives a campaign issue; the Supreme Court took away a campaign issue.
On the other hand, Kevin argues that those who were paranoid about gun ownership before, will remain paranoid now.
Unfortunately, my sense is that the gun confiscation argument never had all that much impact on centrist gun owners in the first place. It only appealed to an extremist fringe that’s fueled by an inchoate rage against pointy-headed DC bureaucrats — a rage that’s not going anywhere just because of one Supreme Court decision. After all, these are the guys who are so far off in lala land that they’re convinced it’s the United Nations that’s going to take their guns away. We all know the Supreme Court can’t stand up to the Secretary General (thanks to pointy-headed DC bureaucrats who are in on the game), so Heller is really pretty meaningless, isn’t it? The fight goes on.
Probably so. But I think we’re dealing with two groups of conservatives here — the paranoid fringe who fear a U.N.-driven gun-confiscation initiative and the more rank-and-file firearm enthusiasts who are find gun-control measures in general to be offensive.
For the prior, the Heller ruling won’t make any difference. Nothing could. But it may prove challenging to motivate the latter, since they just won a fight and no one wants a rematch.