Arizona congressional candidate denounces
ad by gun control group
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2014] By
Daniel Wallis
(Reuters) - A Republican in a hotly contested
Arizona congressional race fought back on Tuesday against an attack ad
by gun control advocates, saying she has always favored barring stalkers
from owning guns and dismissing suggestions to the contrary as "vile
tactics."
|
Martha McSally, a retired Air Force colonel and combat pilot, is
challenging Democrat Ron Barber, a former aide to Gabrielle
Giffords, the then-congresswoman seriously injured in a deadly 2011
shooting rampage outside a Tucson supermarket.
Barber narrowly beat McSally in a November 2012 vote after winning a
special election following the shooting that killed six people and
wounded 13. He and McSally are now vying for a redistricted seat.
Giffords, who was shot through the head, set up a gun control
advocacy group, Americans For Responsible Solutions, which began
running a television ad in Arizona last week criticizing Barber's
Republican rival.
The spot shows a woman whose 19-year-old daughter was stalked and
killed by an ex-boyfriend, and who says McSally opposed making it
harder for stalkers to get firearms. On Tuesday, the group said it
was pulling the ad from screens.
McSally's campaign spokesman, Patrick Ptak, said the makers of the
ad used "vile tactics" and never once asked for her views on the
issue. He said McSally had been a victim of stalking herself and
knew first-hand what the fear was like.
"Her experiences guide her thoughts, and she has always held that
convicted stalkers should be prohibited from obtaining firearms in
all cases," Ptak said in a statement.
"Instead of looking to distort the truth to score cheap political
points, Ron Barber's political allies should have done their
homework first."
Federal law does not preclude individuals convicted of stalking from
owning a firearm, although it does bar those convicted of domestic
abuse from having guns. A bill being considered in Congress seeks to
close the "stalker gap."
[to top of second column] |
Americans For Responsible Solutions accuse McSally of being "in
lockstep with the corporate gun lobbyists who support her."
The Republican candidate called on Barber to denounce the ad in
person.
"For an outside group to tie me to the tragic occurrence of a
stalker killing his victim, is not only personally offensive, it's
degrading to all women and victims who have experienced this pain,"
McSally said.
(The story corrects typo in name in second paragraph, injuries to
Giffords in fourth paragraph.)
(Reporting by Daniel Wallis in Denver; Editing by Peter Cooney)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|