Posted on 01/14/2016 5:26:22 AM PST by marktwain
For the 2016 elections, the Democrat candidates are virtually unanimous on gun control. They support President Obama's executive orders, and want to go beyond what he is pushing:
From the hill:
"I absolutely agree with what the president is trying to do with his executive order," Sanders said to a cheers at a Democratic candidate forum. Clinton was not in attendance.From Time.com:
"I know I'm being attacked as being a stooge for the NRA. Well, some stooge, I have a D-minus lifetime voting record," he said.
Today, Clinton's calculus has changed. She has come out this campaign in favor of gun control measures with a vigor that surprised even some Democrats, targeting minorities and urban voters. Without contradicting any of her policy positions from 2008, Clinton is helping shape the national debate about firearms, calling for a "national movement" to "stand up to the NRA" and lambasting Republicans for voting against gun control legislation.From the businessinsider.com:
O'Malley went on to suggest the repeated mass shootings in America are a "national crisis." Morris said the email is the start of what will be a "major push" from O'Malley during his presidential campaign. In it, he pointed to his record on gun control in Maryland, which included passing legislation in 2013 that banned assault weapons, lowered magazine capacity, strengthened state regulations for gun dealers, and required fingerprinting for gun purchases.
"I proudly hold an F rating from the NRA, and when I worked to pass gun control in Maryland, the NRA threatened me with legal action, but I never backed down," O'Malley wrote.
The Time article goes on to say that Clinton believes that she can thread the needle on gun control by calling for "universal background checks", because polls have said the measure is popular. They do not say that the measure is only popular until the voters learn the details. Actual measures are not popular when the details are learned.
Set the EXAMPLE !
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