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Giuliani
Bobs and Weaves on Gun Control Record
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Rudy Giuliani
had a monumental task last Friday. Going before the NRA, Giuliani
wanted to alleviate gun owners' fears that he would take away their
ability to use guns to defend themselves.
Some media
suggested an even more lofty goal: “it
is possible that the NRA would endorse Giuliani.”
Surely Giuliani
said many comforting things. He talked about the Second Amendment
protecting individual rights. And he now disavows the lawsuits against
the gun makers something that he himself initiated, but that
he says went off course and went in directions with which he disagreed.
For good measure,
Giuliani also invoked his time in the Reagan Justice Department
a quarter of a century ago and Reagan’s defense of gun rights as
evidence of his own support.
For many,
the bottom line is, as the New York Times claimed,
"that he opposes new restrictions on gun ownership."
The Boston
Globe interpreted Giuliani as pledging
"he would punish gun-toting criminals harshly while leaving law-abiding
gun owners alone."
But this is
the same Giuliani who six years ago supported Federal gun licensing
and seven years ago said that 86
to 88 percent of the guns sold in the United States should not
be sold because gun makers "would have to know that they are supplying
an illegal market." This is the same person who sued gun makers
so that the city could recoup its costs of dealing with crime, that
openly broke with the Reagan administration during congressional
testimony on a gun control bill.
Some of those
present at the NRA meeting were moved by Giuliani’s comments. Giuliani
apparently had at least neutralized
their concerns. Yet, a careful reading of Giuliani’s speech finds
it filled with caveats.
Take his answer
to a question about gun control:
"My position
is the law should be left the way it is now. Given the level of
crime in this country, I think the emphasis and the energy should
be spent on enforcing the laws that presently exist, and if changes
in the law are necessary later, that'll respond to other social
conditions.
"I think the
single most important thing that the next president has to do is
to organize an effort in the Department of Justice and with state
and local law enforcement to work in a cooperative way to enforce
the laws that presently exist. After we do that, and we see the
impact of that, then we can take a look at whether new laws are
necessary; they may or may not be. "
"Given the
level of crime in this country?" Would his position change if crime
increased? It would certainly seem so. Surely Giuliani has frequently
claimed
that gun control reduces crime. Indeed, he has claimed that most
of the reduction in New York City’s crime rate during the 1990s
was due to gun control: "the single biggest connection between violent
crime and an increase in violent crime is the presence of guns in
your society...the more guns you take out of society, the more you
are going to reduce murder. The less guns you take out of society,
the more it is going to go up."
Giuliani is
justifiably proud of New York City’s dramatic reductions in violent
crime during the 1990s, but his claim that "the single biggest"
factor was taking guns off the street is weak, to say the least.
There is no academic research by economists or criminologists that
indicates that gun control mattered at all.
There are
other more obvious explanations, especially the massive increase
in full-time sworn police officers. The number grew from 26,844
in 1990 to 39,779 by 2000, roughly five times faster than in other
big cities. New York City also improved its police department by
raising hiring standards and increasing officer pay,
What about
Giuliani’s statement, "After we do that . . . we can take a look
at whether new laws are necessary"? The only restriction that
this implies is that the Federal and state governments must first
do what they can to reduce crime. After that, all restrictions are
off.
Giuliani’s
statement on lawsuits against gun makers is no more comforting.
He now disavows the lawsuits because of "twists and turns I disagree
with." But there is absolutely no mention about what these changes
were. His own
statements, when originally announcing New York City’s lawsuit,
contained a laundry list of complaints. Indeed, his claims seemed
the same as those in other city lawsuits.
Possibly,
Giuliani’s opinions on the Second Amendment were really affected
by Judge Laurence Silberman’s recent court decision striking down
Washington D.C.’s gun ban. Silberman did make a persuasive case
that the Second Amendment does guarantee an individual right. But
Giuliani has frequently pointed out that constitutionally protected
rights still allow “reasonable” regulations to accomplish some other
goal, such as public safety.
Despite the
assurances of the press, Giuliani clearly did not say that he would
oppose new gun laws. Compared to what conservatives call the “just
about flawless performance” by Fred Thompson, Giuliani’s presentation
just didn’t cut it.
With
the nation at war, Republicans possibly have more important things
to care about than gun control. But Giuliani’s image as a straight
shooter risks being damaged by all the bobbing and weaving that
he is doing over gun control.
This article
was originally published at Fox News.
September
28, 2007
John
Lott [send him mail] is the
author of Freedomnomics:
Why the Free Market Works and Other Half-Baked Theories Don’t
and The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2007 John Lott
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