US supreme court overturns New York handgun law
in bitter blow to gun-control push
Biden says ruling ‘should trouble us all’ as
conservative majority strikes down law requiring ‘proper cause’ to carry guns
in public
Ed
Pilkington and Martin Pengelly in New York
Thu 23 Jun
2022 17.33 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/23/us-supreme-court-new-york-law-gun-control
The US
supreme court has opened the door for almost all law-abiding Americans to carry
concealed and loaded handguns in public, after the conservative majority struck
down a New York law that placed strict restrictions on firearms outside the
home.
The
governor of New York, a Democrat, said the ruling was “not just reckless, it’s
reprehensible”. Pointing to recent mass shootings in New York and Texas, a
leading progressive group called the ruling “shameful and outrageous”.
Joe Biden
said: “This ruling contradicts both common sense and the constitution and
should deeply trouble us all.”
On the
left, outrage is growing over the court’s rightward march. Earlier this week,
the court handed down a ruling which attacked the separation of church and state.
As soon as Friday, it is expected to undermine or remove the right to abortion,
guaranteed since 1973, and to reduce the federal government’s ability to cut
emissions contributing to the climate crisis.
The New
York law struck down on Thursday required anyone wanting to carry a handgun in
public to prove that they had a “proper cause” to do so. The decision in New
York State Rifle & Pistol Association v Bruen renders the law an
unconstitutional violation of the second amendment right to bear arms.
In his
ruling, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote: “Apart from a few late-19th-century
outlier jurisdictions, American governments simply have not broadly prohibited
the public carry of commonly used firearms for personal defense. Nor have they
generally required law-abiding, responsible citizens to ‘demonstrate a special
need for self-protection distinguishable from that of the general community’ to
carry arms in public.”
The New
York law, Thomas wrote, also violated the 14th amendment, which made
second-amendment rights applicable to the states.
Biden
pointed to the longevity of New York gun laws and to past supreme court
acceptance of the need to regulate gun ownership.
The
president said: “Since 1911, the state of New York has required individuals who
would like to carry a concealed weapon in public to show a need to do so for
the purpose of self defense and to require a license. More than a century
later, the United States supreme court has chosen to strike down New York’s
long-established authority to protect its citizens.”
Biden
added: “As the late [conservative] Justice [Antonin] Scalia recognised, the
second amendment is not absolute. For centuries, states have regulated who may
purchase or possess weapons, the types of weapons they may use and the places
they may carry those weapons. The courts have upheld these regulations.
“I call on Americans across the country to make their
voices heard on gun safety. Lives are on the line.”
The ruling
has profound implications for the safety and conduct of up to 83 million people
in New York and seven other states plus Washington DC with similar “proper
cause” laws. They include heavily populated states, such as California and New
Jersey, which account for roughly three out of every four Americans.
Just weeks
ago, an 18-year-old carrying a legally bought assault-style rifle shot and
killed 10 people in a racist attack on a supermarket in a majority Black
neighborhood in Buffalo, New York.
Ten days
later, another 18-year-old broke into an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas,
and killed 19 children and two adults before being shot dead by law
enforcement.
Democratic
and Republican senators have since agreed a framework for gun reform. On
Thursday Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader in the Senate, said the
proposals did not “lay one finger on the second amendment” and would make the
country safer. But any gun legislation inevitably faces strong headwinds, with
the potential to blow all the way to the court McConnell helped pack with
conservatives.
In his
dissent to the New York ruling, Stephen Breyer, a liberal justice soon to
retire, wrote: “In 2020, 45,222 Americans were killed by firearms. Since the
start of this year there have been 277 reported mass shootings – an average of
more than one per day.
“Gun
violence has now surpassed motor vehicle crashes as the leading cause of death
among children and adolescents. Many states have tried to address some of the
dangers of gun violence just described by passing laws that limit, in various
ways, who may purchase, carry, or use firearms of different kinds.
“The court
today severely burdens states’ efforts to do so.”
Rahna
Epting, executive director of the progressive group MoveOn, lamented “a
shameful and outrageous decision”, adding: “The conservative-packed supreme
court, in concert with Republicans in Congress, is ensuring our schools, our
grocery stores, and our churches will continue to be targets of violence and
not the sanctuaries and safe places they should be.”
The court
has steadily undermined gun laws, recognising a right to keep guns at home for
self-defense in 2008 and extending that right two years later.
In the New
York case, two men sued the state. Under the “proper cause” law, the men could
secure unlimited permission to carry concealed guns in public only if they
could demonstrate a special need for self-protection. Lawyers argued that
carrying a firearm outside the home was a “fundamental constitutional right. It
is not some extraordinary action that requires an extraordinary demonstration
of need.”
Civil
rights and gun safety groups attempted to sway the court. The American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) argued that lifting controls on guns in public places
would harm first amendment rights such as assembly, association and speech. Gun
control advocates warned that scrapping the law could hit relations between
police and citizens because anyone in contact with law enforcement would be
more likely to be legally armed.
From left
to right: Trudy Hale, Sarah Thompson, Frans Moreland Johns, Barbara Lee and
Carol Deanow
On
Thursday, the governor of New York, Kathy Hochul, said: “The supreme court is
setting us backwards in dealing with gun violence … This decision is not just
reckless, it’s reprehensible.” Hochul also said she was “prepared to call the
legislature back into session to deal with this”.
Letitia
James, the New York attorney general, said she would not be deterred “from
standing up to the gun lobby and their repeated efforts to endanger New
Yorkers”.
A leading
representative of that lobby, Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association,
joined Republicans celebrating “a watershed win” and said: “The right to self-defense
and to defend your family and loved ones should not end at your home.”
But
Keechant Sewell, the New York City police commissioner, warned gun owners: “If
you carry a gun illegally in New York City, you will be arrested. Nothing changes
today.”
Epting, of
MoveOn, said: “It is hard to imagine a supreme court more out of touch with the
people. Commonsense policies to reduce gun violence are supported by nine out
of 10 Americans. This court … is now nothing more than the political arm of the
most extreme elements of the Republican party.”
Pointing to
McConnell’s unprecedented denial of even a hearing to Barack Obama’s third
nominee – Merrick Garland, now attorney general – and the confirmation of three
justices under Donald Trump, Epting said Republicans “stole seats and packed
this court to enact what voters have repeatedly rejected at the ballot box.
“It is far
past time we expand the court, reform it, and restore balance to our judicial
system.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário