by Sky King » Sat Apr 30, 2011 12:17 pm
I don't know how many of you have used the TFA formatted letter to the members of The General Assembly in support of this bill but I for one just received in my email three responses from Stacy Campfield. I guess you could say that turnabout is fair play because the three responses were the exact same letter. Even though the emails I sent him were different, all the responses were the same. It does make me wonder if he even read the emails or just saw the subject line and instructed his assistant to respond to all with the same email. In any case, here is what he sent me:
While I am the original senate sponsor of the guns in parking lots bill in the senate, the house sponsor has told me the votes are not there to pass it as originally drafted through the house judiciary committee. He made a commitment to weaken it and pass a version that would protect property owners from lawsuits if they did allow guns on their property to get it out. It passed with the understanding that if it returned to its original form he would kill his own bill. He agreed. When it got to the house floor it was amended back to its original form but the sponsor stuck to his word and had to kill his own bill.
Without a live house bill the senate bill for all intense and purposes is dead as well. Sorry.
On a brighter note, my bill to allow faculty and staff to carry on state university property is still alive and coming up in the senate judiciary committee. Any support you could give would be appreciated.
Yours in service,
Sen. Stacey Campfield
I guess on the bright side the technically the House bill is not dead, so to use his own logic, that would mean that his Senate bill is also not dead. If we can by some miracle, revive the House bill this Tuesday, Mr. Campfield would have to move his bill as well. Time to crank up those emails and phone calls to the House members again.
If it were not for the fact that I am actually in favor of the campus carry issue, I would be tempted to write back to Mr. Campfield that one hand washes the other. In his email, he asks for our support on the campus carry bill, to utilize what is apparently a common tactic in legislative circles, if you want me to support your issue, I expect you to support mine.
Sam Cooper
Memphis, Tennessee