• Surprising Number of Democrats Support Gun Rights Restoration Effort

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 8 21:57:11 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.usa.constitution.gun-rights, sac.politics, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.politics.liberalism

    https://bearingarms.com/tomknighton/2025/07/02/surprising-number-of- democrats-support-gun-rights-restoration-effort-n1229143

    When people are convicted of a felony or any charge of domestic violence,
    they lose their gun rights. It's not the only right felons lose, of
    course, but it's one of them.

    Over time, they can get the rest of their rights restored. They can go
    through a process and show the court they deserve those rights back.

    Gun rights are different. Those aren't restored. Legally, there's always
    been a process for that, but anti-gunners in Congress defunded it in every budget for decades. The ATF had the authority to restore people's gun
    rights, just not the ability to do it.

    That changed this year when Attorney General Pam Bondi stepped in and
    announced she was pulling the authority back to the Department of Justice.
    The law hadn't vested the authority in the ATF; the DOJ had, and what the
    DOJ gives, it can take away without Congress.

    And it seems the move had a surprising response among Democrats, who
    generally tend to be pretty anti-gun.

    Last February, President Donald Trump ordered a review of federal gun
    policy. One of the first proposals to come from that review was a proposed rulemaking to let DOJ use 18 USC § 925 to restore gun rights, essentially waiving 18 USC § 922(g) for those people. The initial recipient of this administrative grace, even before the rulemaking began, was actor and
    Trump supporter Mel Gibson, disqualified from gun possession by a prior domestic violence conviction.

    In the comment period just ended, 16 Democratic state attorneys general – including those representing liberal bastions like California, Hawaii, Illinois, Connecticut and New Jersey – submitted a letter supporting the proposal (subject to what The Reload called “numerous caveats… intended to ensure that no one truly dangerous is able to make it through the
    process”). But their letter was surprisingly sympathetic to the
    resurrection of the process.

    “While there is no constitutional requirement that mandates any particular
    form of firearms rights restoration by states or the federal government,
    as a policy matter, we believe that our residents’ lives should not be
    defined by the worst mistakes of their pasts,” the letter said.

    While I'm not in agreement with them on the proposed guardrails, the fact
    that so many attorneys general from a party that celebrates gun control is
    an interesting development that, while not necessarily new, is still
    surprising these many days later.

    But the Democrats aren't exactly presenting a united front on this.

    On the other hand, six Democratic senators and representatives filed
    comments arguing that the proposed rule is an unlawful exercise of
    executive power being done to “help violent criminals regain firearms.”

    “Given the pervasiveness of gun violence in our nation, this
    Administration should not be circumventing Congress’s authority to
    prioritize restoring firearm privileges to individuals convicted of
    serious or violent crimes,” the Congressional letter said. “Our country is plagued by an epidemic of gun violence.”

    Of course, these six lawmakers completely ignore that felons are barred
    from owning guns, and yet many of those--the same people who would most
    likely be rejected for having their gun rights restored, in fact--are
    still getting guns and committing crimes anyway. I mean, if they're going
    to go back to their old ways, why would they bother getting their rights restored in the first place? They wouldn't need to if crime were the goal,
    as we plainly see in every American city.

    It's suggested that the problem here isn't what's being done so much as
    which administration is doing it.

    The attorneys general are at least showing some degree of consistency with
    how their party tends to view convicted felons. They often take the
    approach of wanting their rights to be restored as quickly as possible. In fact, some Democrats have even proposed allowing felons who are still in
    prison to vote.

    While their caveats show they're not fully consistent with rights being regained once someone is out of prison, there's still some consistency
    overall.

    The six lawmakers in Congress, however, are probably more opposed to this simply because Donald Trump is president. Had Joe Biden taken this step,
    they likely would have remained silent at most and probably are more
    likely to have celebrated the move.

    At the state level, opposition to President Trump's every move might be present, but not as all-consuming as it is for members of Congress.


    --
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