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State Groups Push Lawmakers Further To The Right On Guns

Heath Druzin
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Boise State Public Radio
Gun rights supporters, including militia members, rally in support of gun rights in September 2018 during an event put on by the Idaho Second Amendment Alliance.

America has one of thehighest rates of gun violence in the developed world. That and the steady drumbeat of mass shootings, has led many states to pass stricter firearms regulations in recent years. But gun rights groups in more conservative states, like Idaho, are pushing legislatures to go in the opposite direction.

One of the groups is The Idaho Second Amendment Alliance. On a recent March day, its president, Greg Pruett, was peering into his smartphone at the Idaho Capitol making yet another Facebook video.

“We fight hard, we play for keeps, we take no prisoners,” he said. “We’ll get in the trenches and fight dirty. We’re here to save Idaho.”

He posts regular updates each Legislative Session for supporters of his influential gun rights group.

There’s been a lot of talk about guns from national politicians. But little action. The real fight is playing out at the state level. Pruett’s group, for example, has pushed Idaho to get rid of nearly all of its regulations.

And now lawmakers are poised to drop restrictions on out-of-state residents’ right to carry concealed weapons.That proposal sailed through the Idaho House and will likely pass the Senate.

Pruett said he took to lobbying state legislators when he saw no action from Washington.

“The Republicans didn’t do gun owners any favors in the first two years of President Trump’s tenure when they had control of The House and the Senate and obviously the White House,” he said.

Credit Heath Druzin / Boise State Public Radio
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Boise State Public Radio
Idaho Second Amendment Alliance President Greg Pruett records a video for his group's Facebook page. Pruett has put pressure on Republican lawmakers to support more and more sweeping gun rights in Idaho.

Idaho has long been gun-friendly, but the state’s absolutist turn is more recent.

Federal legislation pushed by gun rights groups, such as a proposal to force all states to recognize concealed carry permits from other states, has stalled. In that atmosphere, a loose affiliation of so-called no-compromise gun groups, like Pruett’s have been pushing lawmakers in conservative states farther to the right on firearms. These groups look down on the National Rifle Association as too soft on gun rights. And they’ve been making headway.

That’s because Pruett’s group hasmade a habit of supporting successful primary challengers to incumbents who cross them.

“I've seen some really good representatives that have lost the elections because they haven't made the emotional vote that some of those special interest groups want,” Wintrow said.

She said some Republicans who voted ‘no’ on her bills privately told her they support her efforts.

“Why can't we have a more balanced discussion?” she said. “Why can't we talk about public safety? Why can't we talk about the facts and put some of the emotion aside?”

That interview was on a day Wintrow said gun lobbyistshad killed yet another of her bills. This one to extend protections for sexual assault survivors.

Back in Idaho, the climate has gotten to the point where onlookers barely reacted when an older man and young girl with a rifle slung over her shoulder stepped up to the podium in February to testify in a legislative committee hearing.

“My name is Charles Nielsen,” the man said. “This my granddaughter, Bailey - Bailey is 11 years old. Bailey is carrying a loaded AR-15.”

Credit Heath Druzin / Boise State Public Radio
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Boise State Public Radio
Idaho Second Amendment Alliance President Greg Pruett, right, stands with Ammon Bundy, who has been part of two armed standoffs with federal agents, during a gun rights rally in Boise, Idaho, in September 2018. Pruett and other state gun rights activists have been pushing some conservative legislatures to gut gun regulations.

UCLA Law Professor Adam Winkler wrote the book “Gunfight” about America’s legal battles over firearms.

“If one wanted to figure out at how successful the gun rights movement has been you wouldn’t look to Congress, you would look to the states,” he said.

And this is happening as the trend is going in the opposite direction in much of the country. Idaho’s neighbor, Nevada, enacted sweeping firearms regulations last year. In February, New Mexico lawmakers passed a so-called red flag law, meaning courts can temporarily remove guns from at-risk people. And Colorado’s new red flag law went into effect in January.

Winkler says gun groups are trying to fight that tide by remaking the gun rights map state by state.

“I think the gun rights groups do have a larger strategy that explains things like what’s happening in Idaho,” he said. “The idea is to keep the momentum alive for lifting the restrictions on guns in America.

In Idaho, what’s also telling is what hasn’t passed. Bills to keep guns away from certain sex offenders and domestic abusers both failed in the past two years.

Boise Democrat Melissa Wintrow brought those bills. She was shocked at the outcome. This session, she’s not even trying to push them through, confident Republicans won’t touch gun laws in an election year. That’s because Pruett’s group hasmade a habit of supporting successful primary challengers to incumbents who cross them.

“I've seen some really good representatives that have lost the elections because they haven't made the emotional vote that some of those special interest groups want,” Wintrow said.

She said some Republicans who voted ‘no’ on her bills privately told her they support her efforts.

“Why can't we have a more balanced discussion?” she said. “Why can't we talk about public safety? Why can't we talk about the facts and put some of the emotion aside?”

That interview was on a day Wintrow said gun lobbyistshad killed yet another of her bills. This one to extend protections for sexual assault survivors.

This story is publishedin partnership with NPR.Guns & America is a public media reporting project on the role of guns in American life.

Heath Druzin was Boise State Public Radio’s Guns & America fellow from 2018-2020, during which he focused on extremist movements, suicide prevention and gun culture.

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