If Republican presidential candidate John Kasich were in Congress today, he would have likely been among the legislators to vote against a bill that would have banned people on the terrorist watch list from buying guns.
The GOP-controlled Senate did not pass that bill on Thursday, with 54 senators voting against it. Only one Republican voted for the bill, and one Democrat voted against it. According to the Government Accountability Office, suspected terrorists purchased guns over 2,000 times between 2004 and 2014.
The vote came just one day after the shooting in San Bernardino, California, where at least 14 people were killed by two suspects, one of which had pledged allegiance to ISIS.
One argument against the bill, which has been made by the NRA, is that innocent people could have their constitutional rights taken if they are wrongfully on the list, which includes nearly 700,000 people. In an interview on CNN Sunday, Kasich presented a different risk.
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“Of course it makes common sense to say that if you’re on a terrorist watch list, you shouldn’t be able to go out and get a gun,” Kasich said. “But what we have to deal with is the fact that we don’t want to tip somebody off.”
Kasich made the distinction between the no-fly list and the watch list, saying anyone on the no-fly list should be banned from buying a gun.
But he said if people on the terrorist watch list are denied the ability to purchase a firearm, they will find out that they are being tracked, which would sacrifice the success of the intelligence agency. The Ohio governor said when law enforcement in his state stop someone who is a suspected terrorist, it doesn’t tell the person that he or she is on the watch list.
“We want to make sure that we can exploit all the information that we can possibly get,” he said.
Kasich made clear there is not an easy answer to this problem, but sided more with the reliance on intelligence to be able to disrupt terrorist activities.
“Let’s just balance this in terms of what is in the best interest of gathering intelligence and keeping us safe,” he said.









