Former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge made it clear on Friday that he supports an assault weapons ban and that it should be included in the legislation presented to Congress on gun control. His stance hasn’t changed from when he voted for the assault weapons ban while serving in Congress in 1994.
“The right to bear arms under the Second Amendment is a constitutionally protected right but how far do you go?” Ridge said on Andrea Mitchell Reports. “I think as a veteran and I dare say if you ask any veteran who has used an assault weapon in combat or trained with it, whether or not they think their next door neighbor, as well-intentioned as they are, needs to be able to buy one across the counter, I think most would say absolutely not.”
Ridge also expressed his optimism that a proposal which included both the assault weapons ban and background checks would pass through Congress. He told NBC’s Andrea Mitchell that the “mood of the nation has changed” and “we have to be honest with one another.”
In dealing with the issue of gun violence, Ridge–who was a member of the panel that investigated the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre–warned that a simple assault weapons ban wouldn’t immediately solve the problem of the increasing gun violence in America.









