Posted on 11/09/2014 2:26:34 PM PST by marktwain
Photo by Dave Workman
I-594 in Washington State is a horribly written initiative. It consists of 18 page of legalese that seems more intent on trapping legal gun owners than on reducing violent crime. Yet, it passed with almost 60% of the vote. How did this happen? I-594 (pdf) link. Here is an analysis of the initiative by David Kopel.
There is a long history of disarmist initiatives that have started with strong majority support in the polling, that find on election day the support has evaporated and they lose by large margins. I had some hope that this might happen in Washington State with I-594. It did not. Here are the reasons that I believe that second amendment supporters lost this fight.
1. The disarmists had millions of dollars to use, funded by Michael Bloomberg's Moms Demand Action, now Everytown for Gun Sense, and millions more donated by Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, Paul Allen, and Nick Hanauer.
Data reported by the Public Disclosure Commission indicates that these five men, and their spouses, contributed more than half of the total $10.3 million raised to pass I-594. Other wealthy Seattle-area elitists have added considerably more to the pot.This bought saturation of the airwaves and mailboxes with highly deceptive ads. It was a very well designed and effective campaign, aimed at the majority of people who do not understand the law well.
Todays Daily Olympian carries a story asserting that controversial Initiative 594 doesnt create a gun registry, while yesterdays Everett Herald endorsed the 18-page gun control measure, and Saturdays Seattle Times carries an op-ed piece touting I-594s passage.To reinforce this view, David Workman characterizes this report by the Seattle Times as an October Surprise:
That doesnt count the KCPQ true/false critique of television advertisements that labels an advertisement for Initiative 591 mostly false while saying a competing ad for I-594 is mostly true. Perhaps the negative reaction from readers to all of these is a strong indication that a growing number of Evergreen State voters are crying foul about what they believe is biased press coverage of the dueling initiatives campaign.
The Seattle Times recommended a No vote on I-591 back on July 5, while endorsing rival Initiative 594, the 18-page gun control measure. Todays story on the I-591 campaign claim that I-591 is supported by law enforcement in the form of two major organizations, the Washington Council of Police and Sheriffs (WACOPS) and Washington State Law Enforcement Firearms Instructors Association (WSLEFIA) is dubbed half true by the newspapers Truth Needle.The old media was careful to avoided mentioning law enforcement opposition:
The I-591 campaign has been running at a severe disadvantage, outspent nine or ten-to-one, overwhelmed by the I-594 $10.1 million war chest. But they have active-duty law enforcement overwhelmingly on their side, a fact that the gun control crowd has danced around, and most of the mainstream press has almost religiously avoided reporting.
After 18 months of reporting and editorializing, and not until the day after the election, did the headlines acknowledge today what gun rights activists have been saying so long about Initiative 594: Its a gun control measure, as affirmed by the Seattle Times and Seattle P-I.com.3. The strategy to defeat I-594 centered around offering a substitute initiative, I-591. Most of the effort was spent on promoting I-591. That did not correct the deception that was being promoted with I-594. Only about $600,000 was spent on getting out information debunking the I-594 ads. That was about 6% of what was spent promoting I-594, which does not count the millions in unpaid support it was given by the old media. It was nowhere near enough. Most voters never heard or read any opposition. Here is a personal report from examiner.com commenter, Difranco:
Dave. After spending two weeks doorbelling in southern Thurston county then spending 22 days in eastern WA hunting for deer and elk. Almost every hunter / gun owner I spoke to didn't know it was a gun control initiative. This was especially true of the over 50 crowd who don't spend much if any time on the internet.Here is another form a commenter on Freerepublic.com:
The NRA dropped the ball on this. They should have started back in early summer. Not focused solely on the Puget sound, and dropped at least $1 million on TV spots the last three weeks running up to the election.
I live in Washington state. There was no effective advertising against 594. I saw no ad stating the facts about the law, or the restrictions or the way it can turn a normal citizen into a lawbreaker or even a felon. There were MANY ads showing peoples faces that were killed by a person that had domestic abuse history and should not have had a weapon. Of course they never said that an accusation of domestic abuse does not have to be proven in court. Nor did they say whether the gun was purchased or loaned. It is a typical liberal law. It makes people feel good, but does not correct the problem (like laws make evil unable to to be perpetrated).The amount of confusion created by the dueling initiatives and the lack of any effective messaging to confront the deceptive I-594 ads can be shown from the fact that 10% of the voters who voted for I-591 also voted for I-594.
My joke has always been to have legislation for anything titled the “Stop Under the Bed Monsters from Runneling their Claws through the Intestines of Small Children and other Safety Issues Act”.
You could stick “Section 1, Sub-part B - End liberty as known in the western world” in there and idiots would vote for it...
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