BATON ROUGE, La. — On a recent afternoon, a wave of laughter filled the House chamber here as several lawmakers marched down to the floor and stood back-to-back to see who was the tallest among them. A pudgy, balding man, standing about 5-feet-5-inches, puffed out his chest and sized up his taller peers. “I think I’M the tallest!” he boasted, as the gallery erupted in cheers.
It could have been a scene from an old-South narrative on the casual, sometimes absurd goings on in statehouses if not for the two important gun bills that were up for votes that day.
For Louisiana, the stakes could not be higher: it has the worst gun murder rate in the nation, and the highest rate of children killed with guns. Overall, guns have been used to kill more people in Louisiana in recent years than in any other state, according to a new analysis.
Between 2001 and 2010, 4,519 people were killed by guns here, more than a thousand more losses than U.S. combat troops suffered during the Iraq War. More than 75% of those victims were African-American. Haunted by the losses, members of the Black Caucus try again and again to introduce some measure of gun control legislation.
But their efforts are always thwarted while a far more powerful group of Republicans and white Democrats stokes Louisiana’s love affair with guns.
As federal gun control efforts have largely failed in Washington, DC., states have stepped in. Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and New York, all with relatively low levels of gun violence, have recently passed some of the strictest new gun laws in the country.
But in Louisiana, where gun laws are weak and gun violence severe, the Republican-led Legislature can’t loosen firearms restrictions fast enough.
Of the 15 gun bills introduced in the state House this year, 12 would expand gun rights or block federal gun control efforts. Only two bills were aimed at curtailing Louisiana’s extremely lax gun laws. Neither made it out of committee.
Instead, legislators are poised to bolster the state’s standing as the most gun-friendly state in the country. In late April, pro-gun lawmakers in the House rather easily passed a block of controversial gun bills—including one which would usurp the United States Constitution.
“It’s disheartening,” state Rep. Wesley Bishop, a Democrat who represents New Orleans’ 9th Ward, told msnbc. “They see gun violence as something that happens in the larger cities, the black cities, and it doesn’t really concern many of them. Sadly, it’s going to take an incident when gun violence hits their neighbor or their front door for them to really understand.”
They Love Their Guns
On key measures Louisiana is hit harder by gun violence than nearly every other state. It ranks No. 1 in gun deaths of women and of children. In 2010, according to a recent report by the Center for American Progress, 67 Louisiana children were killed with guns.
On average, someone is killed in Louisiana every 10 hours by a gun. As of 2010, the state had a gun-murder rate of 9.5 murders per 100,000 people, more than two and a half times higher than the national average.
Guns are everywhere. On Mother’s Day, a shooting broke out at a New Orleans parade and two children were among 20 people wounded by gunfire. People were injured during a shooting after the Martin Luther King Day parade, and at another just before Mardi Gras festivities.
Yet the pro-gun beat is only getting louder.
“In Louisiana, as we’ve seen for a few years now, they are introducing legislation to allow more people to carry more guns in more places,” said Brian Malte, director of policy and advocacy for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.
“If more guns mean a safer society, Louisiana would be the state with the lowest rates of gun violence. In fact, it has one of the highest because of a lack of gun violence prevention laws.”
Democratic Rep. Barbara Norton, who is African-American, introduced a bill this session that would require all firearms to be secured in a locked container or rendered inoperable by a trigger lock. The bill, which would penalize law-breakers with a $500 fine and up to six months in prison, was defeated in committee.
She and other members of the Black Caucus then argued against House Bill 5, which would prohibit enforcing any federal law restricting semiautomatic weapons.
Supporters argued the bill was needed to counter political overreaction to the Sandy Hook killings, in which 20 children and six teachers were killed with a high-powered assault rifle.
“I have $100,000 in student loans that says this is probably unconstitutional,” said Rep. Joseph Lopinto, a Republican supporter of the bill. “But I like the bill.”
Lopinto and 66 others voted in favor of House Bill 5. Only 25 voted against it.
“They say you’ve got to love something,” said Norton, a gun-owner who represents Shreveport. “Some people here love their guns more than they love anything else.”
DEFEND LOUISIANA
In the House chamber one afternoon in late April, legislators seemed preoccupied with more than just the myriad bills before them.
They sung Happy Birthday to one member. They wished another colleague a sweet farewell into retirement. There was a heavy dose of guffawing and wise cracking.
But between the chatter and collegial banter, a familiar trench had been drawn dividing those who support the expansion of gun rights and the minority who oppose it.
Of the many firearms bills introduced this session, only two would have provided some measure of gun control.
The remaining bills greatly expand gun rights. Among them are efforts to criminalize the enforcement of federal weapons bans; exempt firearms and ammunition manufactured in Louisiana from federal firearms regulation; allow a lifetime concealed weapons permit; and make it illegal to publish the names of people with concealed carry permits.
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The NRA’s Institute for Legislative Action sent out a call to support the legislature’s gun rights bills and oppose the few gun control measures. Louisiana has always been welcoming to the gun lobby and that relationship seems unaffected by a firm national sentiment toward gun control.









