Here we go again “Gun show loophole”, buzz words of the decade.
Invented to make the moonbats feel like they have a purpose in life.
‘Gun show loophole’ initiative at 345,000 signatures
Posted on January 2, 2014 | By Joel Connelly
An initiative to close the “gun show loophole” by requiring criminal background checks for gun purchasers has almost certainly earned a place on Washington’s November ballot.
Backers of Initiative 594 submitted 95,000 signatures on Thursday to the Elections Division of the Washington Secretary of State, on top of 250,000 submitted last fall. The measure requires 246,372 valid voter signatures to earn a place on the ballot.
“Together we will bring firearms background checks to all guns in Washington state,” said Rev. Sandy Brown, senior minister at Seattle First Methodist Church and a leader in the group Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility.
I-594 would extend background checks, currently required for commercial gun dealers, to those purchasing firearms at gun shows and those buying guns online.
It appears, however, that Washington voters may confront two rival initiatives.
Initiative 591, sponsored by gun-rights groups, would prohibit government agencies from requiring background checks unless there is a uniform national standard. Its sponsors presented 5,000 signatures to the Elections Division, but had previously submitted more than enough to make the ballot.
The Secretary of State’s office will begin checking signatures on Jan. 10.
The rival initiatives will first go to the Washington Legislature. Lawmakers can enact one or both into law, put an amended measure onto the ballot or simply refer both initiatives to the voters.
The state last voted on a gun measure in 1997, a proposed requirement for safety locks on firearms and a mandatory gun safety course by new purchasers of firearms. The National Rifle Association mounted a multimillion-dollar campaign while supporters had no resources.
But I-594 backers raised more than $750,000 at a luncheon last spring, and such major donors as Nick Hanauer, Jon Shirley and Tom and Sonya Campion have put resources behind the measure to require background checks.
The initiative grew out of reaction to the December 2012 murder of 20 first graders and six adults at a grammar school in Newtown, Conn.
?Gun show loophole? initiative at 345,000 signatures - Strange Bedfellows ? Politics News
Invented to make the moonbats feel like they have a purpose in life.
‘Gun show loophole’ initiative at 345,000 signatures
Posted on January 2, 2014 | By Joel Connelly
An initiative to close the “gun show loophole” by requiring criminal background checks for gun purchasers has almost certainly earned a place on Washington’s November ballot.
Backers of Initiative 594 submitted 95,000 signatures on Thursday to the Elections Division of the Washington Secretary of State, on top of 250,000 submitted last fall. The measure requires 246,372 valid voter signatures to earn a place on the ballot.
“Together we will bring firearms background checks to all guns in Washington state,” said Rev. Sandy Brown, senior minister at Seattle First Methodist Church and a leader in the group Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility.
I-594 would extend background checks, currently required for commercial gun dealers, to those purchasing firearms at gun shows and those buying guns online.
It appears, however, that Washington voters may confront two rival initiatives.
Initiative 591, sponsored by gun-rights groups, would prohibit government agencies from requiring background checks unless there is a uniform national standard. Its sponsors presented 5,000 signatures to the Elections Division, but had previously submitted more than enough to make the ballot.
The Secretary of State’s office will begin checking signatures on Jan. 10.
The rival initiatives will first go to the Washington Legislature. Lawmakers can enact one or both into law, put an amended measure onto the ballot or simply refer both initiatives to the voters.
The state last voted on a gun measure in 1997, a proposed requirement for safety locks on firearms and a mandatory gun safety course by new purchasers of firearms. The National Rifle Association mounted a multimillion-dollar campaign while supporters had no resources.
But I-594 backers raised more than $750,000 at a luncheon last spring, and such major donors as Nick Hanauer, Jon Shirley and Tom and Sonya Campion have put resources behind the measure to require background checks.
The initiative grew out of reaction to the December 2012 murder of 20 first graders and six adults at a grammar school in Newtown, Conn.
?Gun show loophole? initiative at 345,000 signatures - Strange Bedfellows ? Politics News