Texas lawmakers put new gun rights laws
in their sights
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[December 15, 2014]
By Jim Forsyth
SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - Several proposed
new gun laws await the new Texas legislature when it opens next month,
including one to allow open carrying of handguns in public and another
providing a sales tax holiday for firearms purchases.
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The Republican-dominated legislature will become even more
conservative due the party's landslide win in the November election,
with many members pledging to expanding firearms rights in the state
often seen as an incubator of conservative policies nationwide.
Proposed measures would ban cities and counties from restricting gun
rights and try to have any new federally imposed restrictions on
firearms declared illegal in Texas. Lawmakers are also looking to
prohibit schools from punishing students who fashion their breakfast
pastries into the shape of a gun.
"We have so many gun bills that have been filed that we can't have
anything but an open carry law passed next year," said C.J. Grisham,
founder of the activist group Open Carry Texas.
The group has been pushing for the unlicensed open carrying of
handguns, pointing to laws in Texas and elsewhere that allow for the
unlicensed open carrying of long guns such as rifles.
Current Texas law grants citizens the right to carry concealed
handguns with a permit.
An open carry measure seems likely with nine pieces of legislation
up for consideration and Governor-elect Greg Abbott, a Republican
who takes office in January, saying he supports the move.
There has been some push back after members of Open Carry Tarrant
County were criticized for endangering public safety by staging
rallies this year where armed members took to streets, stores and
restaurants seeking support for their cause.
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In response to a wave of school shootings across the United States,
some conservative Texas lawmakers advocate measures that would make
it easier for teachers and administrators to carry weapons, arguing
that this is a way to prevent violence.
A so-called "Pop-Tart bill" to bar punishment for children who make
firearms inferences has attracted much attention. It was inspired by
the case of a Maryland school that suspended a second-grader for
chewing a breakfast pastry into the shape of a gun.
"The bill is a proactive effort to prevent even the chance of a
Texas student losing valuable instruction time due to an act of
non-disruptive, non-threatening behavior by a child," said State
Representative Ryan Guillen, a Democrat sponsoring the bill.
(Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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