California Democrats dueling over gun
control plans
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[May 17, 2016]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO (Reuters) - Two of the most
powerful politicians in California are advancing the same basic gun
control agenda – yet they are at loggerheads in a political duel that
could preview an ugly race to replace the state’s popular Democratic
governor, Jerry Brown.
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A handgun lies on a target at the shooting range during a meeting of The
Well Armed Woman Shooting Chapters at GAT Guns in East Dundee, Illinois,
April 21, 2015. REUTERS/Jim Young |
The spat among ambitious Democrats took a serious turn this week,
as Senate leader Kevin de Leon aggressively moved to push a package
of gun control bills through the legislature that, if passed, would
largely render irrelevant a firearms referendum by Lieutenant
Governor Gavin Newsom aimed at the November ballot.
"They both want tougher gun laws in California and they both want
credit for it," said Dan Schnur, a former Republican strategist who
now heads the Jesse Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of
Southern California.
Both efforts would prohibit possession of large-capacity ammunition
magazines, require greater scrutiny of ammunition purchasers and
seek to better keep guns out of the hands of violent felons. The
legislative package, which passed the Senate Appropriations
Committee on Monday and will go before the full body on Thursday,
also seeks to eliminate a loophole in an existing law prohibiting
weapons with detachable ammunition magazines.
Newsom, who is running to replace Brown in the 2018 gubernatorial
election, is expected to make the gun control measure a centerpiece
of his campaign, along with a proposed ballot initiative to legalize
the recreational use of marijuana.
But de Leon has not endorsed him. Last year, shortly after Newsom
announced his gun control referendum, de Leon reduced the number of
legislative staff working in the lieutenant governor's office. De
Leon, who represents Los Angeles, is close to possible Newsom rivals
in the governor's race, including former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa.
He has asked Newsom to agree to withdraw his ballot measure if the
Senate package passes, but Newsom has refused.
"The initiative process is a blunt instrument and should always be
the last resort - not the first," de Leon said in an email on
Monday. "It would be preferable to achieve policymaking on such a
complex issue as gun control through the legislative process."
De Leon is also concerned that the ballot campaign would be
expensive, drawing political contributions from pro-gun groups like
the National Rifle Association and potentially causing Democrats in
moderate and conservative districts to lose elections, a source
close to him said.
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But Newsom said in a letter to de Leon shared with Reuters that his
initiative was more comprehensive than the Senate package, tackling
topics that had stalled repeatedly in the legislature.
Dan Newman, Newsom's campaign strategist, said concerns about gun
violence, not politics, motivated the lieutenant governor.
"He will get plenty of exposure this fall via his support for the
marijuana initiative and Hillary for President," Newman said. "Being
relentlessly attacked by the NRA isn't something he needs for his
personal ambition."
Backing a ballot initiative on a controversial topic like gun
control will likely raise Newsom's profile with voters, Schnur said.
But it could also backfire and alienate de Leon.
"It doesn't do his campaign for governor a lot of good to be going
up against the most powerful Democrat in the legislature," Schnur
said.
Gun rights supporters say both men are being opportunistic.
"Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom is no stranger to trying to hijack
high-profile issues in order to get his name out there," said Craig
Deluz, a lobbyist for the Calgun Foundation. "And Senate Pro Tem de
Leon doesn't want the Lieutenant Governor to steal his thunder."
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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