Democratic Presidential Candidates on Gun Safety
Two weeks ago, nine Democratic Party candidates participated in a gun safety forum in Las Vegas. The event was held near the site where two years ago, a killer used rapid-fire weapons to murder 58 people and wound 489. To date, this rampage is the most deadly mass shooting in U.S. history.
MSNBC and Gabby Giffords’ Foundation sponsored the forum. Former Congresswoman Giffords was shot and seriously wounded in 2011 by a man who killed six and wounded 18 at a campaign event in Tucson AZ.
At the forum were candidates Sen. Cory Booker (NJ), Sen. Kamala Harris (CA), former Vice President Joe Biden, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former Housing Secretary Julian Castro, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (MN), former Texas representative Beto O’Rourke, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (MA), and businessman Andrew Yang. Sen. Bernie Sanders (VT) planned to participate, but was hospitalized after a heart attack.
To set the tone for the discussion, Giffords remarked that Democrats and Republicans must come together to protect Americans. She said “Stopping gun violence takes courage, the courage to do what’s right and the courage of new ideas.” Yang and Klobuchar strongly agreed.
Booker commented that the National Rifle Association and the corporate gun lobbies are not alone in blocking progress on gun regulation. “Change never comes from Washington. It comes to Washington by voters demanding it. Every one of us, right now, by doing nothing, is implicated in this. We all are responsible.” Booker also criticized O’Rourke for becoming interested in gun licensing only after a mass shooting in El Paso, his home town.
Harris stated, “This president has gotten nothing much done about anything and would use impeachment as another excuse for ignoring gun deaths.”
Turning to specifics, Booker and Harris supported some form of mandatory buy-backs. Buttigieg said buy-backs have a mixed record and advocated initiating a ban on military-style assault weapons. Castro said he would be open to hearing arguments on both sides.
Biden reminded everyone that in 1994, he sponsored a background check law as well as the now-expired 10-year ban on semi-automatic weapons. As part of his current position, he would also ban high-capacity magazines and online gun sales.
Repeating a consistent campaign theme, Warren said, “Inaction on gun policy is another symptom of corruption in Washington. In fact, this raises a fundamental question of who Washington works for and the answer for decades has been the gun industry.”
Buttigieg offered a larger conceptual statement incorporating the underlying thrust of most forum comments. “In America,” he said, “it’s already the case as far as I know, that anybody can have a slingshot, but nobody can have a nuclear weapon. We’ve already decided as a society, consistent with our Constitution, within the boundaries of the Second Amendment, that there is a line.”
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




