McCain Now Silent On Guns, After Relishing Fights With NRA

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First Posted: 05-15-08 04:25 PM   |   Updated: 05-23-08 05:12 AM

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Less than one month ago, Mayors Against Illegal Gun Violence released a television advertisement encouraging Congress to close the 'gun show loophole,' which allows individuals to purchase firearms at gun shows without a criminal background check.

The spot centered on the pledges made, at one point or another, by each remaining presidential candidates to shut the loophole down. "So with all the talk of bipartisanship, why can't they work together now to pass it?" asks New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.

The answer may be that one of those presidential candidates has distanced himself from his prior advocacy on the issue.

In 2000, Sen. John McCain appeared in a series of television commercials promoting ballot initiatives in Colorado and Oregon that would require people to undergo criminal background checks if they hoped to buy firearms at gun shows. These clips made their way into the recent Mayors Against Illegal Gun Violence commercial. And in the period that followed, the Arizona Republican repeatedly sponsored legislation that pursued such an end.

Recently, however, McCain has walked his advocacy back, declining to cosponsor the very legislation closing the gun show loophole that he once actively championed.

It is, gun control advocates say, a perplexing silence.

After all, McCain came to the issue of closing the gun show loophole in reaction to the shootings at Columbine High School and the terrorist attacks of 9/11. "Clearly," he is quoted as saying in a December 2001 USA Today article, "alleged members of terrorist organizations have been able to secure guns and weapons using the gun show loophole."

And while he voted against the first post-Columbine effort at closing the loophole, he co-sponsored legislation on the issue thereafter. In 2004, McCain attached such a bill as a hostile amendment to a separate piece of legislation introduced by the National Rifle Association. The measure had the votes to pass the Senate before the NRA pulled its support and a flood of lawmakers backed away.

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After that run-in -- and as he began to organize his presidential campaign -- McCain lost interest. The same bill was brought up in 2005, but he declined to include his name as a cosponsor.

"I think it is fair to say he backed off his advocacy," said Jim Kessler, vice president for policy at Third Way, who helped McCain draft his earlier legislation. "[H]e relished taking on the NRA, this was a point of personal pride for him. And then there was talk about doing it again and reintroducing the bill -- but when we didn't see a path to passage, [Sen. Frank] Lautenberg decided to do it instead. The fact that [McCain] didn't put his name on the bill, he probably should have."

As time went on, other political factors came into play, namely the 2008 Republican primary. When gun-policy was thrust back into the legislative spotlight following the Virginia Tech massacre last spring, McCain continued to remain on the sidelines.

In April 2007, the Senator said it was "not necessary at all" to limit the size of ammunition clips sold to the public -- one of the key concerns for post-Virginia Tech advocates. That same month, the Chicago Tribune reported that the school shooting would not sway him away from backing the rights of gun owners. And during the Conservative Political Action Committee conference this past February, McCain embraced an opposition to waiting periods.

"I have defended my position on protecting our Second Amendment rights, including my votes against waiting periods, bans on the so-called "assault weapons," and illegitimate lawsuits targeting gun manufacturers."

Kessler notes that it is not, necessarily contradictory, to take the positions McCain has on the campaign trail and still be for closing the gun show loophole. And indeed, when asked by the Huffington Post to explain where the Senator stood on the issue, spokesman Brian Rogers pointed to the following statement on the campaign's website:

"At a time when some were trying to shut down gun shows in the name of fighting crime, John McCain tried to preserve gun shows by standardizing sales procedures. Federal law requires licensed firearm sellers at gun shows to do an instant criminal background check on purchasers while private firearm sellers at gun shows do not have to conduct such a check. John McCain introduced legislation that would require an instant criminal background check for all sales at gun shows and believes that such checks must be conducted quickly to ensure that unnecessary delays do not effectively block transactions."

But for former McCain colleagues in the gun show loophole fight, it is hard not to notice how quiet on the issue he has actually become.

"It is not really expedient for his political career right now," said Kessler. "It is a confluence of interests coming together... If a vote on the measure came up today, I'm not sure he would actually show up."

Less than one month ago, Mayors Against Illegal Gun Violence released a television advertisement encouraging Congress to close the 'gun show loophole,' which allows individuals to purchase firearms at...
Less than one month ago, Mayors Against Illegal Gun Violence released a television advertisement encouraging Congress to close the 'gun show loophole,' which allows individuals to purchase firearms at...
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Piling it on for McCain’s flip flopping is rightly justified but that doesn’t make Obama better. May I remind the audience that Obama has flip flopped on the gun issue as well. I am not sure why so many politicians flip flop on this issue (McCain, Obama, Romney, Kerry, Gore, etc). The Democrats always say “the public is with us when it comes to gun control,” but the reality is once national candidates leave their anti-gun state constituency behind they have a pro-gun epiphany. Why is that? The NRA? But Obama is not taking funds from interest groups so why did he flip and say guns are an individual right? Is Obama a pawn of the NRA? Plus Move-on, the Joyce foundation, and Brady spend much more than the NRA does on candidates and campaigns. Could it be that most people are pro-gun, but that would mean the Democrats could be wrong about what the people want and we know Democrats are never wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 AM on 05/19/2008

Wishy-washy John hasn't found a position, he doesn't like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 05/16/2008
- biwee I'm a Fan of biwee 13 fans permalink

While I am a gun owner, and firm believer in the true meaning of the 2nd Amendment, the problem of the gun show loophole is real. I went to a gun show in north Alabama several years ago, and noticed an individual with a table loaded with multiple firearms of the same type/model, boxed and new. Yet, this man was not complying with the law on the the BATF forms, or background check. Clearly this man was operating as a dealer with NO FFL! I phoned the BATF offices in Huntsville, Nashville, and Birmingham to complain. No one seemed to care. Then, I called the BATF hotline in Wash DC. Again, no one cared. It seems that BATF does not think it worth the effort to pursue individuals posing as a dealer without a FFL. So, I watched people buy handguns without any sort of identification, without any record of the sale, and without any background check. Way to go!! BATF.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:18 AM on 05/16/2008
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 164 fans permalink

On a related subject, why can't the NRA agree with mainstream America on this issue? It would do a lot to save the lives of both civilians and police, and I don't see how it would hurt the NRA.
One of our local law enforcement people was killed by an AK-47. I own rifles, but I don't see why anyone needs to own a rifle that was designed from the ground up for one purpose only, to kill people as efficiently as possible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 05/16/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 334 fans permalink
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"Flip flop flip flop flip flop flip flop..."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 AM on 05/16/2008
- Mitchell4A I'm a Fan of Mitchell4A 8 fans permalink

Here are a dozen, guaranteed, money-back reasons why John McCain won"t be the next president. (I can only offer a limited-time, money-back guarantee, since unfortunately I can"t control world events.)

1. The McBush factor. McCain"s support of the Iraq War will make it impossible for him to break from Bush, the most unpopular president in living memory. The photo of McCain hugging and being kissed by Bush will become increasingly embedded in the collective consciousness of the American people as the months roll on.

The rest is too long for a comment. Please see, "A Dozen Reasons Why McCain Won"t Win: Money-Back Guarantee" http://msa4.wordpress.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 AM on 05/16/2008
- ann1 I'm a Fan of ann1 12 fans permalink

Sen Mccain keep doing what you're doing! You must appeal to all US citizens. We must come together in order to form a more perfect union!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 05/15/2008
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 448 fans permalink
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No wonder George F. Will, a Republican conservative, calls him the "peripatic pinball".

http://www.newsweek.com/id/136308

This is a great example of how Republicans don't trust the Doubletalk Express.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 PM on 05/15/2008
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And they tried to label Kerry as a flip-flopper. McCain is much worse than Kerry ever thought about being.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 PM on 05/15/2008

FLIP-FLOP McCAIN

Once again McCain flip-flops.
McCain - flip-flops on timetable for getting troops out of Iraq
McCain - flip-flops on immigration
McCain - flip-flops on running a clean campaign
McCain - flip-flops on Bush/Cheney tax cuts
McCain - flip-flops on courting "agents of intolerence"

FLIP-FLOP, FLIP-FLOP, FLIP-FLOP McCain will say anything, do anything to get elected

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 05/15/2008
- Bobrobert I'm a Fan of Bobrobert 9 fans permalink

McCain is a lying sack of doodoo.

Pardon my french.

Make sure you vote folks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 PM on 05/15/2008
- newshawk14 I'm a Fan of newshawk14 8 fans permalink

I must say of McCain, that he has never met a principle, that he wasn't willing to compromise.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 05/15/2008
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 164 fans permalink

On the one hand, saying whatever his torturers wanted him to say, when he was a prisoner in Vietnam, is 100% forgiveable and understandable.

On the other hand, saying whatever he thinks needs to be said to get elected to the presidency, regardless of what he has said when he was only a Senator, displays a lack of morality that I find frightening and unconscionable.

Flip flopping under torture is a way to stay alive. Flip flopping on the road to the presidency is a way to get us all killed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 AM on 05/16/2008
- olivia I'm a Fan of olivia 95 fans permalink

I would like John McCain to tell us all about how the Bush administration has been sneakily working to weaken the Second Amendment.

Anyone who doesn't know about this, Google it up please.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 PM on 05/15/2008
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Thanks for the tip.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 05/15/2008
- Chillinout I'm a Fan of Chillinout 125 fans permalink
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I am not sure why McCain's flip flops are even news anymore. Whatever he says today he will repudiate the next day. The ONLY thing McCain has been consistent with is his flip flopping.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 PM on 05/15/2008
- ruscle I'm a Fan of ruscle 2 fans permalink

I think it is called mild senility.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 05/15/2008

McCain's addlepated

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 05/16/2008
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