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Tuesday, Sep 3 2019

Full Issue

One Day After Texas Mass Shooting, Handful Of State Laws Loosening Gun Regulations Go Into Effect

The timing of the new Texas laws drew scorn from gun control advocates, as they kick in just a day after the latest mass shooting in the state left seven dead and at least 21 wounded. Texas already had some of the least restrictive gun laws in the country.

Politico: Hours After Shooting Rampage, Texas Gun Laws Loosened

Several new firearm laws took hold in Texas on Sunday, loosening restrictions as to when and where weapons can be carried, one day after the state was rocked by a shooting in which a gunman killed seven and wounded at least 21. A man opened fire during a traffic stop in Midland, Texas, on Saturday afternoon, firing at random as he drove down the highway and into Odessa. The shootings came less than a month after a gunman killed 22 people in El Paso and wounded two dozen more. Texas has seen 4 of the 10 deadliest mass shootings in modern history. (Dugyala, 9/1)

The Wall Street Journal: As Texas Deals With Recent Violence, Looser Gun Laws In State Take Effect

Supporters of the new laws argue they empower law-abiding citizens who carry firearms legally and ensure they are not defenseless when violence breaks out. The backers also said these changes protect their constitutional right to bear arms. “It makes no sense to disarm the good guys and leave law-abiding citizens defenseless where violent offenders break the law to do great harm,” said Texas state Sen. Donna Campbell, a Republican, said earlier this year. Gun-control groups have criticized these laws, arguing that instead of protecting public safety, they put more people in danger. (Fung and Findell, 9/1)

Vox: Texas’ Gun Laws Were Loosened One Day After Shooter Killed 7 In Odessa

Abbott has long been a staunch advocate for gun access. He has encouraged private gun ownership, at one point telling his fellow Texans to “pick up the pace” of their gun purchases because he was “embarrassed” that California led the US in gun sales. A pro-gun agenda has enjoyed support within the Republican-majority Texas state legislature, where ten bills became law at the end of the legislative session in June, and were signed into law by Abbott shortly thereafter. These went into effect on Sunday. (Van Wagtendonk, 9/1)

ABC News: 8 New Laws Ease Texas Gun Restrictions A Day After Odessa-Midland Mass Shooting

He said the law removing the limit on armed marshals at schools was prompted by a mass shooting in May 2018 at a high school in Santa Fe in which eight students and two teachers were killed. He also said the legislation allowing gun owners to bring their weapons to church resulted from a shooting rampage in November 2017 that left 27 dead at a Baptist church in Sutherland Springs. But the governor added that there remains a "sense of urgency to arrive at solutions" to the rampant gun violence sweeping the state and country. (Hutchinson, 9/1)

NBC News: New Texas Laws Loosening Gun Control Draw Outrage From Advocates After Odessa Shooting

“Four of the deadliest mass shootings in the last decade have taken place in Texas,” Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, a national group working to end gun violence, told NBC News. “Instead of following other states' lead and passing life-saving legislation, like background checks and strong red flag laws, Texas’ governor and legislature have made even more lax gun laws,” she said. (Kesslen, 9/1)

CNN: Texas Gun Laws: Weapons Will Be Allowed In Churches And On School Grounds

Here are the sweeping firearm laws going into effect. (9/1)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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