State Democrats Push Gun Restrictions After Texas Shootings
Kaul calls for law requiring background checks and preventing sale of 'ghost guns.'
Democratic state officials in Wisconsin say they’ll renew their push for new gun laws in the wake of the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas that killed 19 elementary students and two teachers.
On Wednesday, state Sen. Melissa Agard, D-Madison, said she would pick up an effort to pass laws that would expand background checks and create a red flag law in Wisconsin that would allow a judge to order guns be taken away from individuals found to be dangerous. Also on Wednesday, state Attorney General Josh Kaul called on state legislators to take action to “keep guns out of the hands of domestic abusers” in the wake of a state Supreme Court decision last week that overturned some restrictions.
“No parent, no family member should drop their children off in school and have to pick them up in a body bag and have them identified by DNA because their little bodies were riddled by a domestic terrorist,” she said, recounting what guardians have gone through in Uvalde. “We need to stand up and be brave to take life-saving action to save our children.”
In Wisconsin, the stalemate between the Republican-controlled state Legislature and Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has meant no new laws restricting or liberalizing gun ownership have passed in recent years.
In April, Evers vetoed three Republican bills that would have expanded the ability to carry concealed weapons, including one that would have let people with concealed carry permits bring guns onto school grounds in their cars.
In 2019, Evers called a special legislative session on the same proposed laws Agard advocated for Wednesday — expanding background checks and creating a red flag law. The GOP Legislature began and ended that session in less than a minute with no debate or discussion of the bills. Legislative leaders were dismissive of the proposals at the time.
“We’ve already had these debates,” Vos told reporters then. “We know where people stand.”
Speaking at the Capitol on Wednesday, Kaul said “Republican legislators have made the choice not to act and to allow (mass shootings) to continue happening. And until they act, we can’t expect a different result.”
“Politicians, and Republican politicians in particular, need to be more concerned about parents than they are about the NRA,” Kaul said, referring to the National Rifle Association, a gun rights lobbyist. “They need to be more worried about keeping kids safe than they are about keeping their political futures safe.”
“That is going to make it easier for people who have committed domestic violence to get firearms,” Kaul said. “They now will pass a background check … and be able to get a concealed carry license. And I have not seen the Legislature lift a finger in the few days since then.”
Kaul called it a “common sense” measure that has broad public support, along with universal background checks and laws preventing the sale of “ghost guns,” or untraceable gun-assembly kits that allow people to put together guns in their homes.
In an appearance early this month on WPR’s “The Morning Show,” retiring state Sen. Dale Kooyenga, R-Brookfield, noted that his efforts as a “Second Amendment guy” to introduce a law that would have limited domestic violence perpetrators’ ability to purchase guns hit a brick wall in the Legislature.
“I said simply, ‘Let’s replicate what’s in federal law in state law,'” Kooyenga said. “And I couldn’t even get hearings on those bills. And that’s ridiculous.”
Wisconsin’s state Superintendent Jill Underly, who heads the state Department of Public Instruction, in a statement called on lawmakers to “take action to urgently protect our children and communities.”
“The education of Wisconsin students and the safety of our children and educators in our schools must be address — not tomorrow, not next month, and not after the next loss of life,” Underly said. “Our students cannot learn if they are not alive. It sickens me that I have to say that, but I will keep saying it until our kids are safe.”
Listen to the WPR report here.
Wisconsin Democrats say they’ll push for new gun restrictions in wake of Texas school shooting was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
Well WI republicans love their blood money. Every child murdered is more cash in their pockets.