Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, a Democrat, today signed the nation’s second package of gun reform legislation since the December mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Democrats in the legislature started with seven bills. The three* signed by Hickenlooper require universal background checks, payment of the $10 cost by the person being checked instead of by the state, and a limit of 15 rounds on ammunition magazines.
The limit on magazines might carry the greatest political risk for Hickenlooper. An ammunitions manufacturer, Magpul, says it is now making plans to leave the state. Hickenlooper seems ready to bear that cost, whatever it is. From the Denver Post:
“Large magazines have the potential to turn killers into killing machines,” said Hickenlooper spokesman Eric Brown.
“This law won’t stop bad people from doing bad things. But it does open the possibility that a person determined to kill people might be slowed down even for an instant. That instant might mean the difference between life and death for some people.”
Governor Hickenlooper also expressed sorrow today for the state’s director of corrections, Tom Clements, who was killed on Tuesday night at his home. Someone knocked on the door and shot Clements when he answered. Police are still searching for the suspect.
Meanwhile, Colorado Republicans marked the occasion of Hickenlooper signing the gun bills by hanging in the Senate minority office a modified New York state flag bearing an image of Michael Bloomberg’s face and Hickenlooper’s, and the words “New Flag of Colorado.” Their contention is that Mayor Bloomberg’s campaigning for gun reform has skewed the politics in Colorado.









