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Obama thrusts gun control debate into forefront of 2016 race

ASSOCIATED PRESS

David Foley holds a handgun while shopping at the Spring Guns and Ammo store on Monday in Spring, Texas.

WASHINGTON >> President Barack Obama is making good on his pledge to politicize gun violence.

The package of gun-control executive actions Obama will formally announce Tuesday has pushed the contentious issue to the forefront of the 2016 presidential campaign, just weeks from the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses. While Republicans and Democrats are deeply divided on the issue, both parties see Obama’s actions as an opportunity to generate enthusiasm among primary voters.

But in a general election, the gun debate becomes a blurrier political proposition. Public opinion polls show Americans overwhelmingly support expanding background checks for gun purchases, but are more divided on the broader question of stricter gun laws. The gun-control advocacy movement has gained wealthy backers, including former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, but the National Rifle Association remains one of the most dominant forces in American politics.

“It’s an issue that both (sides) are really going to want to talk about for the next couple of months, but I don’t know how much they’re going to want to talk about it in the fall,” Matthew Dowd, a former political adviser to President George W. Bush, said of the eventual presidential nominees.

For now, Obama’s gun actions are a central topic as candidates crisscross Iowa, New Hampshire and other early voting states.

GOP contenders promise that if they get elected, they’ll swiftly repeal Obama’s actions, which include steps to expand background checks for gun purchases. GOP front-runner Donald Trump vowed to “un-sign” the president’s measures. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said that on his first day in the Oval Office, “those orders are gone.” Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said that while Obama may currently hold the power of the pen, “my pen has got an eraser.”

On the Democratic side, front-runner Hillary Clinton has unveiled her own proposals for gun-control executive actions and enthusiastically endorsed Obama’s measures even before the president’s official announcement.

“I know that a Republican president would delight in the very first day, reversing executive orders that President Obama has made,” Clinton told voters in New Hampshire.

The cornerstone of Obama’s executive actions is a background check requirement for guns purchased from dealers even if they’re bought online or at gun shows. The new federal guidance aims to narrow the so-called gun show loophole that allows some purchases to occur without a background check.

In announcing the actions in the early days of 2016, Obama is purposely thrusting the issue into the center of the presidential campaign. As he foreshadowed his executive orders last fall, Obama said addressing gun violence is “something we should politicize.”

The emphasis on gun issues marks a shift for Democrats, who have shied away from the subject in recent presidential elections, not only because of the NRA, but also due to competing views within the party. Clinton and Obama both treaded carefully on guns when they faced off in the 2008 Democratic primary, and the president didn’t attempt to pass congressional legislation until the shooting of elementary school students in Newtown, Connecticut, which occurred about a month after his 2012 re-election.

Democratic losses throughout the South, however, have narrowed the number of elected officials in the party who oppose gun restrictions. Gun-control backers also point to shifts in public opinion and the rise of well-funded advocacy groups as reasons Democratic candidates can campaign on the topic with fewer electoral risks.

Actions to expand background checks, for example, have broad public support. A CBS/New York Times poll conducted in October found that more than 90 percent of Americans favor requiring background checks on all potential gun buyers.

Bloomberg has pumped millions of dollars into gun-control advocacy efforts, including donations to candidates who support more restrictive measures. An organization founded by former Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords, who was badly wounded in a 2011 shooting, also has raised millions to promote gun control measures.

“There’s more organization, there’s more capacity, there’s more money,” said Kristin Goss, a public policy professor at Duke University who has studied gun-control advocacy groups. But asked whether the new organizations can succeed in matching the energy and organizational power of the NRA in a general election, Goss said, “That’s an open question.”

Surveys have shown that gun-control supporters lag those who favor fewer restrictions on most measures of political activism. During the failed legislative efforts in 2013, the NRA mobilized its members to flood Capitol Hill with phone calls and letters urging lawmakers to oppose the White House-backed measures.

Still, Republicans know that while opposing nearly all restrictions on gun laws may be the only acceptable position for many GOP primary voters, it could be less attractive in a general election. Associated Press-GfK polls conducted in October and December found 58 percent of Americans favor stricter gun laws. That’s up slightly from 52 percent two years ago.

Associated Press writer Scott Bauer in Boone, Iowa, and AP News Survey Specialist Emily Swanson in Washington contributed to this report.

9 responses to “Obama thrusts gun control debate into forefront of 2016 race”

  1. noheawilli says:

    Couple things, the President is attempting to bring gun control into the elections, we’ll see if it sticks. 2nd would any of these new measures have prevented any of the known attacks of the past decade? Again we’ll see, but as Cruz said, his pen has an eraser.

    • koolau says:

      Follow that with Larry the Cable Guy’s all too common sense rationale: “The next time I have poor grades, I’m blaming my pencil.” It appears our feared leader is going execute his executive powers on pencils.

      • wilikitutu says:

        Nope the President is raising the ante for this election. Will see how well millions of small Democratic donners fare against Republican billionaires.

  2. marcus says:

    Such abuse of Executive Action must be tempered somehow, whether Dems or Repubs!

    • palani says:

      The Dems scream when there is a Republican President, and the Repubs holler when a Democrat is in the Oval Office, but Obama has taken this unconstitutional Executive abuse to the highest levels ever. But the more he usurps the power of the Congress, the more clear the intent and the importance of the second amendment becomes.

      • wilikitutu says:

        This is a good time to test the 2nd Amendment – to see if it really says what the Republicans think. Let the Republicans take it to Court and find out for themselves.

  3. Keonigohan says:

    With O it’s all about POLITICS. He doesn’t know how to reason or negotiate with people hence the Executive Action. O is the product of a dysfunctional life…not family because there is none. He has no legacy…now Americans must deal with a lame QUACK in this his last year.

  4. wilikitutu says:

    This is a test for Republican deep pocket donors.

  5. ready2go says:

    Selling guns and rifles without a background check? To mentally sick or criminals? No public safety concerns? What are the gun purchasing laws in Hawaii?

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