Gun control was supposed to be a key issue in this election, and while it wasn’t the driving issue for most voters, it was still pushed as an important topic.
Yet, according to the polls, if it were that important, gun control candidates would win hands down. The polls all claim that a massive majority of people want gun control of various kinds. That didn’t seem to pan out in the least. We can see that in part based on the “Leaders We Deserve” being handed their collective posteriors anywhere they faced a real challenge, with the only exception being someone who never talked about gun control.
At the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, they’re not thrilled with the outcome of the election, and the cope is strong there.
Common-sense gun laws, such as universal background checks and extreme risk protection orders (ERPOs), continue to stall in Congress and struggle to pass in many states—even though most Americans support these policies: Over 80% support universal background checks, and about 70% support ERPOs.
So why is gun policy so out of step with the preferences of most Americans?
Silvia Villarreal, MPP, director of research translation at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, says that today, the support of the majority of the population, including most gun owners, is being drowned out by a highly organized and committed group spurred by a powerful gun lobby that perpetuates the myths that owning guns makes people safer and that common-sense gun laws threaten Second Amendment rights.
The fact that they keep using the term “common sense” for these anti-gun proposals just tells you where their priorities are, not that we needed to figure it out. Bloomberg’s name is on the school, for crying out loud. We know what the agenda is. […]
— Read More: bearingarms.com
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