Tony
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2003
- Messages
- 15,410
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/3135430 ...full article
I think it was and is a mistake for the democratic opposition to hang on to "gun-control" as an issue. It's politically un-popular and costs elections.
edit: I just wanted to say that this isn't an attack on democrats. A viable opposition(s) is essential for the function of a democratic country.
The guns are not what makes the National Rifle Association formidable in the eyes of politicians. It's the political firepower.
With nearly 4 million members and millions of dollars to donate to political campaigns, many lawmakers and other observers say the NRA is the most powerful lobbying group in Washington. Some, including former President Clinton, attribute President Bush's 2000 victory to the NRA's work in several rural states. The NRA boasts of taking revenge on its political enemies, evicting more than a dozen members from Congress in 1994 after passage of the Brady Bill and the Assault Weapons Ban.
In 2001, Fortune magazine declared the NRA the most powerful lobbying group in Washington. That was the last year it ranked lobbying groups. Fortune called the NRA "pivotal in defeating Al Gore in Arkansas, Tennessee and West Virginia — all states that usually vote Democratic."
"They put a lot of people and a lot of money into electing to Washington the people who support them and unelecting the people who don't support them," said Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, who covered lobbyists for Fortune and now writes the "K Street Confidential" column for the Washington Post.
I think it was and is a mistake for the democratic opposition to hang on to "gun-control" as an issue. It's politically un-popular and costs elections.
edit: I just wanted to say that this isn't an attack on democrats. A viable opposition(s) is essential for the function of a democratic country.