by johnharris » Wed May 04, 2011 6:58 am
As Sam's comments evidence, many are quite disappointed in the General Assembly which, this year, means we are really disappointed in the Republican caucus because the Republicans are in complete numerical control of the General Assembly.
While I feel that there is a solid core of the Republicans and several specific Democrats who remain true and supportive of the conservative platforms and the rights of citizens, I have concluded that a large number in leadership and others in the caucus are more concerned with "business" financial support which means that they are putting their individual interests in re-election to office ahead of doing what is right or even what was promised.
I think that it is clear that the bill would have passed on the floor with bipartisan support in a format that we wanted. However, there are many Republicans, in the fashion of Beth Harwell, who would have probably voted against it. Reportedly, some of those Republicans are pretending to be true 2nd Amendment supporters but I feel that the evidence is mounting that this alleged allegiance is more to garner votes rather than as a core conviction.
For example, it has been heard in the halls that the Republican leadership, particularly in the House, want to go through this 2 year cycle and get this large block of freshman re-elected before they are required to make a public vote on firearms issues - a protectionist mindset geared toward political power rather than constitutional stewardship. Indeed, if you look at their actions on other legislation (like the AT&T legislation which has raised materially the costs of basic phone services in rural Tennessee, the acceptance of passing class-based legislation on the right of self-defense, and even the misrepresentation and passage of "tort control" which will impair your constitutional rights to a jury trial) evidence that the Republicans are all to happy to pass some controversial legislation so long as it is legislation that is somewhat either favorable accepted by the news media or simply misunderstood by the news media.
The plain and simple conclusion is that with huge numerical margins in both houses, the Republicans - as a party and caucus - are refusing to and clearly unwilling to push forward with self-defense, 2nd Amendment, hunting or even basic civil rights legislation. They wanted your support to get control but now we are being treated as the unwanted step-children of the political spectrum.
2012 is a year that should be feared by incumbents other than Obama and it is going to be the job of Tennessee's citizens to have a clear memory of those who were spineless and refused to carry forward the fight to remove infringements on basic constitutional rights.
John Harris
Executive Director
Tennessee Firearms Association, Inc.
Attorney