A recent poll showed broad support nationwide for banning assault rifles. Only one demographic stood opposed: white men who didn’t finish college.
Texas Republican leaders who have degrees but pretend otherwise ably represent these uneducated white men. As Barack Obama spoke to the country about the need for common-sense gun safety in his second inaugural address today, Texas Republican leaders are leading from behind—in the polls, at least. Despite a national consensus in favor of banning assault weapons, outlawing high-capacity magazines, and closing the gun show loophole, our Republican leaders are standing in the doors of Texas shooting ranges, daring Obama to send in the troops. So far, this is just a metaphor.
A Dallas state representative promised to file a bill allowing teachers to pack heat in public schools. And in the state where Charles Whitman invented college mass shootings, a state senator offered a bill allowing college students to have guns on campus because, he said, “Law enforcement does a wonderful job, but they cannot personally protect 50,000 students.”
Texas has enough guns for every man, woman and child to have a couple each. Being a liberal means owning only one gun. When Texas installed metal detectors at the state capitol after a shooting, they allowed people with concealed handgun licenses to bypass security lines. So these bills expanding gun rights are mainstream.
But where Texas Republicans really make their mark is anti-government paranoia. Attorney General Greg Abbott ran web ads inviting “law-abiding New York gun owners” to move to Texas to avoid having to follow that state’s new gun law. And former vagrant and current congressman Steve Stockman was such an embarrassment that voters fired him in 1996 after one term. He won a new term in November and recently threatened to impeach Obama if he used executive powers for gun control. This kind of crazy is the new normal.
Freshman state Rep. Steve Toth, a Woodlands Republican, rose to prominence recently when he proposed throwing federal agents in state prison if they dared enforce any new anti-gun laws. “It is our responsibility to push back when those laws are infringed by King Obama,” said Toth, who recently took an oath of office to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States … so help me God.”
Toth addressed the rally at the capitol on Gun Appreciation Day. Five people were injured by accidental shootings at three other Gun Appreciation Day events around the country, but in Austin the only violence was done to reason and good taste. “The thing that so angers me, and I think so angers you, is that this president is using children as a human shield to advance a very liberal agenda that will do nothing to protect them,” said Toth, pulling off the neat trick of using the worst possible post-Newtown image while also acting concerned for children’s safety.
Sen. Ted Cruz put an Orwellian flourish on “Meet the Press” when he said, “There actually isn’t the so-called ‘gun show loophole.’ That doesn’t exist. Any licensed firearm dealer who sells at a gun show has to have a background check.”









