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November
6, 2002 9:40 a.m.
Second
Wins and Losses
How
the Second Amendment made out.
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he
Second Amendment enjoyed a good election night for Congress, a
mixed night in the governors' races, and some defeats on ballot
initiatives. Here are the key results:
U.S.
SENATE
Arkansas:
Solidly pro-gun incumbent Tim Hutchinson lost to antigun Mark
Pryor — although Pryor claimed to be pro-gun during the
election, and so might sometimes vote in favor of civil rights.
Georgia:
Usually antigun Democrat Max Cleland replaced by reliably
pro-gun Saxby Chambliss.
Louisiana:
Antigun incumbent Mary Landrieu faces a December 7 runoff with
pro-rights Republican Election Commissioner Suzanne Haik Terrell
.
Minnesota:
The late Paul Wellstone was strongly antigun. Moderately
pro-rights Norm Coleman is leading to replace him.
Missouri:
Reflexively antigun Jean Carnahan defeated by pro-rights Jim
Talent.
Pro-Second
Amendment stalwarts Bob Smith of New Hampshire and Jesse Helms
of North Carolina will be replaced by John Sununu and Elizabeth
Dole; Sununu will always vote pro-gun, and Dole usually so, but
neither will be a leader as their predecessors were. Conversely,
South Carolina's Lindsey Graham will be more constructive on the
issue than retiring Strom Thurmond.
Net
result: Pro-rights gain of +2, with the possibility of
adding one more vote in the Louisiana runoff. This brings the
Senate to rough parity on most firearms issues.
GOVERNORS
Alaska:
Antigun Democrat Tony Knowles succeeded by pro-gun Frank
Murkowski.
Arizona:
Pro-gun Jane Hull succeeded by antigun Janet Napolitano.
Hawaii:
Moderately pro-gun Republican Lingle has a small lead for this
open seat.
Illinois:
Antigun incumbent Republican George Ryan succeeded by extremely
antigun Democrat Rod Blagojavich.
Kansas:
Moderately anti-gun Governor Bill Graves succeeded by thoroughly
antigun Democrat Kathleen Sebelius. Concealed-carry and
preemption legislation will be stifled.
Maryland:
Energetically antigun Parris Glendening succeeded by moderately
pro-gun Bob Ehrlich. This should provide Marylanders with a
respite from repressive new laws, and ensure that existing laws
are administered more fairly.
Massachusetts:
New Governor Mitt Romney is mildly pro-gun, and should be better
than retiring Jane Swift.
Michigan:
Moderately pro-gun John Engler replaced by solidly antigun
Jennifer Granholm.
New
Hampshire: Antigun Jeanne Shaheen replaced by pro-gun Craig
Benson.
Oregon:
Pro-gun Kevin Mannix narrowly trails mildly antigun Ted
Kulongoski to replace outgoing antigun leader John Kitzhaber.
Pennsylvania:
All that prevents new Governor Ed Rendell from being the most
anti-gun governor in America is Rod Blagojevich's victory in
Illinois.
Rhode
Island: In a surprise, outgoing antigun Republican Lincoln
Almond is replaced with moderately pro-gun Republican Ronald
Carcieri.
Vermont:
Strongly pro-gun Democrat Howard Dean is leaving to run for
president. Pro-gun Republican Jim Douglas won a plurality, but
not a majority, over mildly antigun Democrat Douglas Racine. The
Vermont house will select the next governor, in a secret ballot,
and is expected to pick Douglas.
Wisconsin:
Pro-rights incumbent Republican Scott McCallum defeated by
energetically antigun Jim Doyle, thanks in part to a Libertarian
who polled 10 percent.
Net
result: Progress in small or medium population coastal
states (Alaska, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Oregon,
Rhode Island) is outweighed by losses of medium and large states
in the interior (Arizona, Kansas, Illinois [bad to terrible],
Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin).
U.S.
HOUSE
The two antigun incumbents defeated by pro-gun
candidates was Minnesota's Bill Luther and Ohio's Tom Sawyer.
The only pro-gun incumbent to lose was Republican Heather Wilson
of New Mexico, while Henry Bonilla of Texas is trailing, with
3/4 of precincts reporting.
For
open seats, the pro-gun candidate won in Alabama 3 (over a
moderately pro-gun Democrat), Arizona 1, Colorado 7 (with 3/4 of
precincts reporting, in a tight race), Florida 24, Georgia 12,
Indiana 2, Michigan 9, Michigan 10, Michigan 11, New Hampshire
1, New Jersey 5 (replacing antigun Republican Marge Roukema, who
lost in the primary), Ohio 3 (moderately pro-gun), Oklahoma 4,
Pennsylvania 6, Pennsylvania 18, and Utah 1. The pro-rights
candidate lost in California 18 and Maryland 2.
Net
result: The pro-rights majority in the House of Representatives
grows wider by a notable margin — large enough to make a
difference in a tough vote.
INITIATIVES
South Dakota had an initiative to explicitly inform juries in
the criminal cases of their right to acquit a technically guilty
defendant, if they thought the charges were unjust. The
initiative lost in a landslide,
thus stopping a potential nationwide movement that would have
been of great help to people accused of violating repressive gun
laws, or of using firearms against attackers.
Oklahoma
voters rejected an initiative to make it more difficult to put
hunting, fishing, and trapping initiatives on the ballot — a
proposal aimed at heading off initiatives against outdoor
sports.
LEGISLATIVE
PREDICTIONS
In the states, California is poised for more restrictions on gun
rights. The Illinois and Pennsylvania legislatures should block
most of their governors' proposals, although progressive
legislation is impossible to enact. Concealed carry reform can't
become law in Kansas or Wisconsin, but remains viable in
Minnesota, New Mexico, and Ohio.
In
Congress, the Homeland Security Department bill will pass the
Senate during the lame-duck session, along with language
allowing commercial airline pilots to carry handguns. The House
has already passed legislation, using its power to regulate
state or local efforts to interfere with interstate, to stop
abusive anti-gun lawsuits by municipalities. The Senate might
pass such a bill during the lame-duck session, or in the next
Congress. The 1994 Clinton ban on cosmetically incorrect
firearms (so-called "assault weapons") sunsets in
September 2004, and efforts to renew or expand it face an uphill
battle.
Bush
judges who respect the Second Amendment will take their place in
the federal judiciary, including, perhaps, the replacements for
Supreme Court Justices Rehnquist, O'Connor, and Stevens. Should
Rehnquist (pro-Second Amendment), O'Connor (mildly so), and
Stevens (strongly opposed) all be replaced by rights-conscious
justices, the Supreme Court may be ready for a ruling to
explicitly reaffirm its line of cases recognizing the Second
Amendment as an individual right, albeit one subject to a wide
variety of regulation.
—
Dave Kopel
is a columnist for NRO. On election night, he'll be providing
Colorado and national election commentary on KBDI-TV Channel 12
in Denver, simulcast on the web on KNRC
radio, 1510 AM, from 8-10 p.m. Mountain Time, and will also
appear on a webcast from KCNC-TV,
Channel 4 in Denver, from 7-7:30. |