DAVID LITVAK: Putting a hold on needed gun reform: How one senator subverts the will of the American people
by David Litvak
Columnists | 11/6/07
Posted online at 2:43 AM EST on 11/6/07
/ Last updated at 7:41 PM EST on 11/6/07
What constitutes an abuse of power? Just ask Senator Tom Coburn (R-Oklahoma), who seems determined to make the practice of imposing holds on legislation a veritable art form. Coburn, who currently has holds on about 100, recently set his sights on the National Instant Criminal Background Check Improvement Amendments Act of 2007, which would improve the federal government's ability to prevent the mentally ill from buying guns-a group already prohibited from purchasing firearms. The bill enjoys bipartisan support in both houses of Congress and is endorsed by the National Rifle Association.
Coburn's opposition to the bill is a curious, though by no means uncharacteristic, sentiment. He claims the legislation is inadequately funded because it doesn't include cuts to other programs, and further, that it risks infringing on the rights of veterans' or other citizens' Second Amendment rights if they have been "unfairly tagged" as mentally unstable. Never mind that Chris Cox, chief lobbyist for the NRA, has said "there is not one person legally able to buy a firearm today who would be banned under the new law," a most accurate assessment. Coburn has historically opposed most spending bills, although the $400 million the Senate bill calls for is a veritable pittance by congressional standards. In his zealotry to safeguard gun rights, however, Coburn goes too far. It appears that he views any restriction on the an individual -no matter how depraved, unstable, or undeserving-to purchase a gun as a possible threat to that right for the rest of us.
Even the NRA disagrees with Coburn here, rightly pointing out that the bill not only clarifies and improves upon existing legislation, but also that it "would allow some people now unfairly prohibited from owning guns to have their rights restored, and to have their names removed from the instant check system."
This legislation is particularly notable given the source of its inspiration: Seung-Hui Cho, the perpetrator of April's horrific shootings at Virginia Polytechnic Institute who was able to buy guns because Virginia failed to inform the national background check system that he had been ordered to undergo mental health treatment. Had the system been properly informed, Cho would have been barred from purchasing those weapons.
Coburn's opposition to the bill is a curious, though by no means uncharacteristic, sentiment. He claims the legislation is inadequately funded because it doesn't include cuts to other programs, and further, that it risks infringing on the rights of veterans' or other citizens' Second Amendment rights if they have been "unfairly tagged" as mentally unstable. Never mind that Chris Cox, chief lobbyist for the NRA, has said "there is not one person legally able to buy a firearm today who would be banned under the new law," a most accurate assessment. Coburn has historically opposed most spending bills, although the $400 million the Senate bill calls for is a veritable pittance by congressional standards. In his zealotry to safeguard gun rights, however, Coburn goes too far. It appears that he views any restriction on the an individual -no matter how depraved, unstable, or undeserving-to purchase a gun as a possible threat to that right for the rest of us.
Even the NRA disagrees with Coburn here, rightly pointing out that the bill not only clarifies and improves upon existing legislation, but also that it "would allow some people now unfairly prohibited from owning guns to have their rights restored, and to have their names removed from the instant check system."
This legislation is particularly notable given the source of its inspiration: Seung-Hui Cho, the perpetrator of April's horrific shootings at Virginia Polytechnic Institute who was able to buy guns because Virginia failed to inform the national background check system that he had been ordered to undergo mental health treatment. Had the system been properly informed, Cho would have been barred from purchasing those weapons.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 19
John Barrington
posted 11/06/07 @ 11:18 PM EST
Thank God for Sen. Coburn! Seung Hui Cho broke plenty of laws when he purchased his guns. Do you trust a government that failed to enforce its own laws to make more laws? Mr. (Continued…)
mitchshrader
posted 11/07/07 @ 5:46 AM EST
Tom Coburn has my vote now and forever, for his courage in the face of treason.
I intend myself and every friend to be armed. Pick for yourself, but picking for me isn't going to happen. (Continued…)
DanH
posted 11/07/07 @ 6:50 AM EST
Congrats, Senator! Perhaps others might take his cue and actually stand for what they believe in, instead of trying to take other's rights away.
KenP
posted 11/07/07 @ 7:27 AM EST
Don't blame Senator Coburn. He's just doing the job that I and my fellow voters in Oklahoma sent him to do. BTW Great job Senator Coburn!
Richard D
posted 11/07/07 @ 8:18 AM EST
The ONLY 'needed gun reform' this country needs was written into the Bill of Rights. It is the 2nd Amendment.
The Right of The People to Keep and Bear Arms SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED. (Continued…)
Jason
posted 11/07/07 @ 9:08 AM EST
The bill is a farce and this Congressman is standing up for what alot of citizens believe. If only more Federal Representitives would listen to us.
Defender
posted 11/07/07 @ 9:52 AM EST
Virginia Tech was a gun-free zone.
The Appalachian School of Law, a private college, was NOT. That's why Peter Odighizuwa, a disgruntled failing student, was only able to shoot dead THREE professors and students before two other students ran to their cars, got their own guns and and brandished them at HIM. (Continued…)
Defender
posted 11/07/07 @ 10:00 AM EST
There has never been a gun law passed that did not involve "mission creep." The mental health database check will mean if anyobne has been treated for mild depression after the death of a loved one, they could be "mentally incompetent" to buy a gun. (Continued…)
Snowflake
posted 11/07/07 @ 10:10 AM EST
Government lists are too easy to get on and impossible to get off. ADD/ADHD in school - you have a record of mental problems. Too many traffic tickete - you have a problem with authority. (Continued…)
Mike
posted 11/07/07 @ 11:04 AM EST
we need more senators like coburn that stand up and do what is right. at least one guy read the constitution.
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