Washington state’s vote on I-594 has NRA worried

Every once in a while something good happens, something that restores one’s faith in humanity. So put your hands together for the voters of Washington state.

In the midst of the Republican midterm tsunami, 59 percent of them made history. They said “yes” to a state ballot measure that requires background checks for virtually all gun buyers. In other words, a lopsided majority of voters thumbed their noses at the gun-fetish lobby that equates freedom with unfettered bang bang.

This ballot win for gun safety reform — the first statewide referendum on guns since the 2012 Sandy Hook slaughter — is politically significant. It proves that voters are willing to do what their spineless lawmakers have so shamelessly failed to do: Defy the NRA.

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

Even while Washington’s voters were busy re-electing a Republican state senate, they defied the NRA by a margin of 18 percentage points. They summarily ignored the NRA’s propaganda that the ballot measure was actually “a universal handgun registration scheme” promoted by “elitists.” Propaganda like the seven-minute NRA ad, which lied that the ballot measure was really about “collecting a database of gun owners” for the purpose of “confiscation.”

The measure — officially known as Initiative 594 — didn’t have a single syllable about gun registration. The measure simply says that if you want to weaponize yourself at a gun show, or on the Internet, or via other non-licensed sellers, you first need to be checked out, to ensure that you’re not nuts or felonious. And by the way, this common-sense notion is not the province of “elitists.” It’s drawing support from 92 percent of Americans — including 92 percent of gun owners.

Most importantly, Washington state’s balloting has opened the door for ballot bids elsewhere — perhaps starting with Nevada, Maine, and Oregon. As UCLA law professor Adam Winkler says, referring to last week’s outcome, “I think it does represent a subtle shift. “What we’re seeing is a renewed effort by gun control advocates to take this issue to the voters directly.”

Six states (including Delaware) have gone the legislative route to expand background checks for virtually all buyers, but 21 states allow voters to OK laws via the ballot route. That’s an expensive and labor-intensive proposition (TV ads for the couch potatoes, signature petitions to get on the ballot), but the gun safety reform movement finally has sufficient financing and grass-roots heft — courtesy of Michael Bloomberg and his 2.5-million member group — to match the NRA dollar for dollar in a ballot campaign.

Bloomberg spent $4 million in Washington state; the NRA, sensing defeat, spent barely half a million. It didn’t even bother to boost the ballot counter-measure crafted by the gun fetishists — Initiative 590, which would’ve barred expanded background checks. The voters trounced it by a 10-point margin. Let’s hear it for “state’s rights.”

What a stark contrast to our nation’s capital. Nineteen months ago, in the aftermath of Sandy Hook, the cowering U. S. Senate refused to expand background checks via federal law — despite the polls which, at the time, showed 90 percent support for that policy. The chamber’s refusal brought to mind (my mind, anyway) this old Mark Twain quip: “Suppose you were an idiot, and suppose you were a member of Congress — but I repeat myself.”

But if voters are willing on a state-by-state basis to defy the gun-fetish lobby, to end-run their quivering elected representatives, then hey, that’s what I meant at the top about renewed faith in humanity.

And here’s what an NRA spokesman said, prior to the vote tally in Washington state: “If (gun safety reform) is successful in this ballot initiative in Washington, we are very concerned that (it) will be replicated across the country and we will have ballot initiatives like this one. … That is why we are so concerned.”

The NRA is concerned. How often do we see that sentence?

Dick Polman is the national political columnist at NewsWorks/WHYY public radio in Philadelphia. Email him at dickpolman7@gmail.com.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Tuesday, May 20

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

A visitor takes in the view of Twin Lakes from a second floor unit at Housing Hope’s Twin Lakes Landing II Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023, in Marysville, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Editorial: Housing Hope’s ‘Stone Soup’ recipe for community

With homelessness growing among seniors, an advocate calls for support of the nonprofit’s projects.

Douthat: What guides Trump policy is a doctorine of the deal

Hawk or dove, former friend or foe; what matters most is driving a bargain, for good or ill.

Friedman: The uncertainties facing Biden and the world order

Biden, facing infirmities of mind and body, still understands the mission of America in the world.

Comment: GOP’s tax cut bill is ill-timed for economic moment

If a recession does hit, it’s the lower- and middle-income who can spend the economy’s way out; not the rich.

Comment: AmeriCorps staffers were making America healthy again

A modest stipend for students was providing experience and value. Until the Trump administration fired them.

Comment: When should judges have power to tell a president no?

Birthright citizenship is clearly law. What was up for debate is the fate of nationwide injunctions.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Monday, May 19

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Comment: Cuts to Medicaid will make fentanyl fight harder

Medicaid’s expansion is helping many get the addiction treatment they need, reversing the crisis.

Comment: PBS, NPR need funding, and a good shake-up

PBS’s best dramas come from British TV. It needs to produce its own money-makers like ‘Downton Abbey.’

Saunders: Why did Tapper wait until now to admit Biden’s decline?

It was clear to voters long before Biden dropped out. Yet, now the CNN host has a book to sell.

Wildfire smoke builds over Darrington on Friday, Sept. 11, 2020 in Darrington, Wa. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Editorial: Loss of research funds threat to climate resilience

The Trump administration’s end of a grant for climate research threatens solutions communities need.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.