The Secret History of Gun Rights: How Lawmakers
Armed the N.R.A.
They served in Congress and on the N.R.A.’s board at
the same time. Over decades, a small group of legislators led by a prominent
Democrat pushed the gun lobby to help transform the law, the courts and views
on the Second Amendment.
Mike
McIntire
By Mike
McIntire
July 30,
2023, 3:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/30/us/politics/nra-congress-firearms.html
Long before
the National Rifle Association tightened its grip on Congress, won over the
Supreme Court and prescribed more guns as a solution to gun violence — before
all that, Representative John D. Dingell Jr. had a plan.
First
jotted on a yellow legal pad in 1975, it would transform the N.R.A. from a
fusty club of sportsmen into a lobbying juggernaut that would enforce elected
officials’ allegiance, derail legislation behind the scenes, redefine the legal
landscape and deploy “all available resources at every level to influence the
decision making process.”
“An
organization with as many members, and as many potential resources, both
financial and influential within its ranks, should not have to go 2d or 3d
Class in a fight for survival,” Mr. Dingell wrote, advocating a new aggressive
strategy. “It should go First Class.”
To
understand the ascendancy of gun culture in America, the files of Mr. Dingell,
a powerful Michigan Democrat who died in 2019, are a good place to start. That
is because he was not just a politician — he simultaneously sat on the N.R.A.’s
board of directors, positioning him to influence firearms policy as well as the
private lobbying force responsible for shaping it.
And he was
not alone. Mr. Dingell was one of at least nine senators and representatives,
both Republicans and Democrats, with the same dual role over the last
half-century — lawmaker-directors who helped the N.R.A. accumulate and exercise
unrivaled power.
Their
actions are documented in thousands of pages of records obtained by The New
York Times, through a search of lawmakers’ official archives, the papers of
other N.R.A. directors and court cases. The files, many of them only recently
made public, reveal a secret history of how the nation got to where it is now.
Over
decades, politics, money and ideology altered gun culture, reframed the Second
Amendment to embrace ever broader gun rights and opened the door to relentless
marketing driven by fear rather than sport. With more than 400 million firearms
in civilian hands today and mass shootings now routine, Americans are bitterly
divided over what the right to bear arms should mean.
The
lawmakers, far from the stereotype of pliable politicians meekly accepting
talking points from lobbyists, served as leaders of the N.R.A., often prodding
it to action. At seemingly every hint of a legislative threat, they stepped up,
the documents show, helping erect a firewall that impedes gun control today.
The Fight for the Right to Trespass
“Talk about
being strategic people in a place to make things happen,” an N.R.A. executive
gushed at a board meeting after Congress voted down gun restrictions following
the 1999 Columbine shooting. “Thank you. Thank you.”
The fact
that some members of Congress served on the N.R.A. board is not new. But much
of what they did for the gun group, and how, was not publicly known.
Representative
Bob Barr, a Georgia Republican, sent confidential memos to the N.R.A. leader
Wayne LaPierre, urging action against gun violence lawsuits. Senator Ted
Stevens, an Alaska Republican, chided fellow board members for failing to
advance a bill that rolled back gun restrictions, and told them how to do it.
Republican
Representative John M. Ashbrook of Ohio co-wrote a letter to the board
describing “very subtle and complex” tactics to support “candidates friendly to
our cause and actions to defeat or discipline those who are hostile.” Senator
Larry E. Craig, an Idaho Republican who was a key strategic partner for the
N.R.A., flagged and scuttled a proposal to require the use of gun safety locks.
And then
there was Mr. Dingell. In a private letter in October 1978, the N.R.A.
president, Lloyd Mustin, said his “insights and guidance on the details of any
gun-related matter pending in the Congress” were “uniformly successful.” Just
as valuable, he said, was the congressman’s stealthy manipulation of the
legislative process.
“These
actions by him are often carefully obscured,” Mr. Mustin wrote, so they may
“not be recognized or understood by the uninitiated observer.”
As chairman
of the powerful House commerce committee, Mr. Dingell would send “Dingellgrams”
— demands for information from federal agencies — drafted by the N.R.A. Other
times, on learning of a lawmaker’s plan to introduce a bill, he would scribble
a note to an aide saying, “Notify N.R.A.”
Beginning
in the 1970s, he pushed the group to fund legal work that could help win court
cases and enshrine policy protections. The impact would be far-reaching: Some
of the earliest N.R.A.-backed scholars were later cited in the Supreme Court’s
District of Columbia vs. Heller decision affirming an individual right to own a
gun, as well as a ruling last year that established a new legal test
invalidating many restrictions.
The files
of Mr. Dingell, the longest-serving member of Congress, were donated to the
University of Michigan but remained off-limits for nearly eight years. They
were only made available in May, five months after The Times began pressing for
their release.
Mr. Barr,
who has remained on the N.R.A. board since leaving government in 2003, said in
an interview that he did not recall the memos he wrote to Mr. LaPierre, which
were among the congressman’s papers at the University of West Georgia. But
during his nearly six years in office while also a N.R.A. director, he said,
the group “never approached me to do anything that I didn’t want to do or that
I would not have done anyway.”
“I’m doing
it as a member of Congress who also happens to be an N.R.A. board member,” Mr.
Barr said.
N.R.A.
manuals say its board has a “special trust” to ensure the organization’s
success and to protect the Second Amendment “in the legislative and political
arenas.” Under ethics rules, lawmakers may serve as unpaid directors of
nonprofits, and the gun group is classified by the I.R.S. as a nonprofit
“social welfare organization.” No current legislators serve on its board.
In 2004,
the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence objected to three Republican
lawmakers then serving as unpaid N.R.A. directors: Mr. Craig and
Representatives Don Young of Alaska and Barbara Cubin of Wyoming. The Brady
organization argued that their fiduciary duty to the N.R.A. conflicted with
their government roles.
“Here, the
lobbyist and the lobbied are the same,” said the complaint. It was rejected by
Senate and House ethics committees.
Mr. Dingell
eventually left the N.R.A. board. The turning point was his support for a 1994
crime bill that included an assault weapons ban. In a terse resignation letter,
he acknowledged a problem in serving as an elected official and a director —
though he would continue to work closely with the group for years.
“I deeply
regret,” Mr. Dingell wrote, “that the conflict between my responsibilities as a
Member of Congress and my duties as a board member of the National Rifle
Association is irreconcilable.”
‘Patriotic Duty’
John
Dingell was comfortable with firearms at an early age: When not blasting ducks
with a shotgun, he was plinking rats with an air gun in the basement of the U.S.
Capitol, where he served as a page. They were pursuits he picked up from his
father, a New Deal Democrat representing a House district in Detroit’s
working-class suburbs, who enjoyed hunting and championed conservation causes.
After
serving in the Army in World War II, the younger Mr. Dingell earned a law
degree and worked as a prosecutor. He succeeded his father in 1955 at age 29.
Nicknamed “the Truck” as much for his forceful personality as his 6-foot-3
frame, Mr. Dingell was an imposing presence in the House, where he became a
Democratic Party favorite for pushing liberal causes like national health
insurance.
Mr. Dingell
recalled, in a 2016 interview, that he saw President John F. Kennedy “fairly
frequently” at the White House and generally “traveled the same philosophical
path.”
“Except on
firearms,” he added.
In December
1963, just weeks after Mr. Kennedy was murdered with a rifle bought through an
N.R.A. magazine ad, Mr. Dingell complained at a hearing about “a growing
prejudice against firearms” and defended buying guns through the mail. His
advocacy made him popular with the N.R.A., and by 1968 he had joined at least
one other member of Congress on its board.
Historically,
the N.R.A.’s opposition to firearms laws was tempered. Founded in 1871 by two
Union Army veterans — a lawyer and a former New York Times correspondent — the
association promoted rifle training and marksmanship. It did not actively
challenge the Supreme Court’s view, stated in 1939, that the Second Amendment’s
protection of gun ownership applied to membership in a “well regulated Militia”
rather than an individual right unconnected to the common defense.
Mr. Dingell
was preceded in Congress by his father, Representative John David Dingell Sr.,
a New Deal Democrat who enjoyed hunting and championed conservation
causes.Credit...Harris & Ewing, via Library of Congress
During the
1960s, public outrage over political assassinations and street violence led to
calls for stronger laws, culminating in the Gun Control Act, the most
significant firearms bill since the 1930s. The law would restrict interstate
sales, require serial numbers on firearms and make addiction or mental illness
potential disqualifiers for ownership. The N.R.A. was divided, with a top
official complaining about parts of the bill while also saying it was something
“the sportsmen of America can live with.”
President
Lyndon B. Johnson wanted the bill to be even stronger, requiring gun
registration and licensing, and angrily blamed an N.R.A. letter-writing
campaign for weakening it. The Justice Department briefly investigated whether
the group had lobbied without registering, and in F.B.I. interviews, N.R.A.
officials “pointed out” that members of Congress sat on its board, as if that
defused any lobbying concerns. (The case was closed when the N.R.A. agreed to
register.)
The debate
over the Gun Control Act agitated Mr. Dingell, his files show. He asked the
Library of Congress to research Nazi-era gun confiscations in Germany to help
prove that regulating firearms was a slippery slope. He considered
investigating NBC News for a gun rights segment he viewed as one-sided. At an
N.R.A. meeting, he railed about a “patriotic duty” to oppose the “ultimate
disarming of the law-abiding citizen.”
Mr. Dingell
wrote to a constituent explaining his dual role as a member of Congress and an
N.R.A. director.
As Mr.
Johnson prepared to sign the act in fall 1968, Mr. Dingell was convinced that
gun ownership faced an existential threat and wrote to an N.R.A. executive
suggesting a bold strategy.
The group,
he said, must “begin moving toward a legislative program” to codify an
individual’s right to bear arms “for sporting and defense purposes.” It was a
major departure from the Supreme Court’s sparse record on Second Amendment
issues up to that point. The move would neutralize arguments for tighter gun
restrictions in Congress and all 50 states, he said.
“By being
bottomed on the federal constitutional right to bear arms,” he wrote, “these
same minimal requirements must be imposed upon state statutes and local
ordinances.”
President
Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Gun Control Act at the White House in 1968. It was
the most significant firearms law since the 1930s.Credit...Associated Press
A New Aggressiveness
Mr.
Dingell’s legislative acumen proved indispensable to the gun lobby.
The 1972
Consumer Products Safety Act, designed to protect Americans from defective
products, might have reduced firearms accidents that killed or injured
thousands each year. But the N.R.A. viewed it as a backdoor to gun control, and
Mr. Dingell slipped in an amendment to the new law, exempting from regulatory
oversight items taxed under “section 4181 of the Internal Revenue Code” — which
only covers firearms and ammunition.
While Mr.
Dingell’s office was publicly boasting in 1974 of his bill to restrict
“Saturday night specials,” cheap handguns often used in crimes, C.R. Gutermuth,
then the N.R.A.’s president, confided in a private letter that the congressman
had only introduced it to “effectively prevent” stronger bills. “Obviously,
this comes under the heading of legislative maneuvering and strategy,” he
wrote.
Still, the
public generally favored stricter limits. After a 3-year-old Baltimore boy
accidentally killed a 7-year-old friend with an unsecured handgun, a
constituent wrote to Mr. Dingell asking, “How long is it going to be before
Congress takes effective action?” He instructed an aide to “not answer.”
Creating a
more aggressive lobbying operation was on Mr. Dingell’s mind as he jotted notes
ahead of an N.R.A. board meeting in 1975.
When the
N.R.A. board met in March 1974, Mr. Gutermuth reported that “Congressman
Dingell and some of our other good friends on The Hill keep telling us that we
soon will have another rugged firearms battle on our hands.” Yet he expressed
dismay that N.R.A. staff had not come up with a “concrete proposal” to fend it
off.
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Mr. Dingell
had an idea.
In memos to
the board, he complained of the N.R.A.’s “leisurely response to the legislative
threat” and proposed a new lobbying operation. Handwritten notes reflect just
how radical his plans were. He initially said the group, which traditionally
stayed out of political races, would “not endorse candidates for public office”
— only to cross that out with his pen; the N.R.A. would indeed start doing
that, through a newly created Political Victory Fund.
The
organization’s old guard, whose focus continued to be largely on hunting and
sports shooting, was uncomfortable. Mr. Gutermuth, a conservationist with
little political experience, wrote to a colleague that Mr. Dingell “wants an
all out action program that goes way beyond what we think we dare sponsor.”
“John seems
to think that we should become involved in partisan politics,” he said.
Mr. Dingell
got his way. A 33-page document — “Plan for the Organization, Operation and
Support of the NRA Institute for Legislative Action” — was wide-ranging. The
proposal, largely written by Mr. Dingell, called for an unprecedented national
lobbying push supported by grass-roots fund-raising, a media operation and
opposition research.
Mr. Dingell
made detailed arguments for why the N.R.A. was not doing enough to fight gun
control efforts in the 1970s.
It would
“maintain files for each member of Congress and key members of the executive
branch, relative to N.R.A. legislative interests,” and “using computerized
data, bring influence to bear on elected officials.” The plan reflected Mr.
Dingell’s savvy as a lawmaker: “For greatest effectiveness and economy,
whenever possible, influence legislation at the lowest level of the legislative
structure and at the earliest time.”
Walt
Sanders, a former legislative director for Mr. Dingell, said the congressman
viewed the N.R.A. as useful to his goal of protecting and expanding gun rights,
particularly by heading off efforts to impose new restrictions.
“He
believed very strongly that he could affect gun control legislation as a senior
member of Congress and use the resources of the N.R.A. as leverage,” Mr.
Sanders said.
The changes
mirrored an increasingly uncompromising outlook within the N.R.A. membership.
In what became known as the “Revolt at Cincinnati,” a group of hard-liners
seized control of the group at its 1977 convention.
The coup
drew inspiration from Mr. Dingell, who a month before had circulated a
blistering attack on the incumbent leadership. He was revered by many members,
who saw little distinction between his roles as a lawmaker and an N.R.A.
director, and would write letters praising his fight on their behalf against
“gun-grabbers.”
In his
responses, he would sometimes correct the impression that he represented the
N.R.A. in Congress.
“I try to
keep my responsibilities in the two capacities separate so that there is no
basic conflict,” he wrote to one constituent.
Cultural Shift
When
gunshots claimed the life of John Lennon in December 1980 and nearly killed
President Ronald Reagan a few months later, the N.R.A. readied itself for a
familiar battle. Its officials, meeting in May 1981, grumbled that their
“priorities, plans and activities have necessarily been altered.”
But
remarkably, no new gun restrictions made it through Congress.
The group
saw the failure of gun control efforts to gain traction as a validation of its
new agenda and a sign that, with Reagan’s election, there was “a new mood in
the country.” The N.R.A. and its congressional allies seized the moment,
eventually pushing through the most significant pro-gun bill in history, the
Firearms Owners’ Protection Act of 1986, which rolled back elements of the Gun
Control Act.
The bill —
largely written by Mr. Dingell but sponsored by Representative Harold L.
Volkmer, a Missouri Democrat who would later join the N.R.A. board — was
opposed by police groups. It lifted some restrictions on gun shows, sales of
mail-order ammunition and the interstate transport of firearms.
The N.R.A.
also went ahead with Mr. Dingell’s plans “to develop a legal climate that would
preclude, or at least inhibit, serious consideration of many anti-gun
proposals.” A strategy document from April 1983 laid out the long-term goal:
“When a gun control case finally reaches the Supreme Court, we want Justices’
secretaries to find an existing background of law review articles and lower
court cases espousing individual rights.”
The
document listed several scholars the N.R.A. was supporting. Decades later,
their work would be cited in the Supreme Court’s landmark 2008 decision in
Heller, affirming gun ownership as an individual right. And it would surface in
last year’s New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen ruling,
which established a right to carry a firearm in public and a novel legal test
weakening gun control efforts — prompting lower courts to invalidate
restrictions on ownership by domestic abusers and on guns with serial numbers
removed.
Mr.
Dingell’s aides considered his options for trying to repeal the assault weapons
ban in 1995.
Key to
those victories were appointments of conservative justices by N.R.A.-backed
Republican presidents. By the time Antonin Scalia — author of the Heller
opinion — was nominated by Reagan in 1986, the joke was that the “R” in N.R.A.
stood for Republican, and internal documents from that era are laced with
partisan rhetoric.
A 1983
report by a committee of N.R.A. members identified the perceived enemy as
liberal elites: “college educated, intellectual, political, educational, legal,
religious and also to some extent the business and financial leadership of the
country,” inordinately affected by the assassinations of “men they admired” in
the 1960s.
Lawmakers
joining the board during that time — Mr. Ashbrook, Mr. Craig and Mr. Stevens —
were all Republicans. Mr. Craig, a conservative gun enthusiast raised in a
ranching family, would become “probably the most important” point person for
the N.R.A. in Congress after Mr. Dingell, said David Keene, a longtime board
member and former N.R.A. president.
“He was
actually like having one of your own guys there,” Mr. Keene said in an
interview.
He added,
however, that a legislator need not have been a board member to be supportive
of the group’s ambitions.
Mr. Craig
did not respond to requests for comment, and Mr. Ashbrook and Mr. Stevens are
dead. The N.R.A. did not respond to requests for comment.
President
Bill Clinton handed James Brady a pen after signing the Brady Handgun Violence
Prevention Act, which imposed a background check requirement for gun purchases
from licensed dealers.Credit...Marcy Nighswander/Associated Press
Mr. Dingell,
under increasing pressure as a pro-gun Democrat, faced a reckoning of sorts in
1994, when Congress took up an anti-crime bill that would ban certain
semiautomatic rifles classified as assault weapons. He opposed the ban but
favored the rest of the legislation.
A year
earlier, he had angered fellow Democrats by voting against the Brady Handgun
Violence Prevention Act, which imposed a background check requirement. This
time, after intense lobbying that included urgent calls from President Bill
Clinton, Mr. Dingell lent crucial support for the new legislation — and
resigned from the N.R.A. board.
His wife,
Representative Debbie Dingell, a proponent of stronger gun laws who now
occupies his old House seat, said her husband faced a backlash from pro-gun
extremists that left him deeply disturbed.
“He had to
have police protection for several months,” Ms. Dingell said in an interview.
“We had people scream and yell at us. It was the first time I had seen that
real hate.”
Despite
voting for the ban, Mr. Dingell almost immediately explored getting it
overturned. Notes from 1995 show his staff weighing support for a repeal
proposal, conceding that “a solid explanation will have to be made to the
majority of our voters who favor gun control.”
‘Best Foot Forward’
Eric Harris
and Dylan Klebold were too young to legally purchase a firearm, so in November
1998 they enlisted an 18-year-old friend to visit a gun show in Colorado and
buy them two shotguns and a rifle. Five months later, they used the weapons,
along with an illegally obtained handgun, to kill 12 students and one teacher
at Columbine High School.
The
massacre was a turning point for a country not yet numbed to mass shootings and
for the N.R.A., criticized for pressing ahead about a week later with plans for
its convention just miles from Columbine. That sort of response would be
repeated years later, after a teenager killed 19 students and two teachers in
Uvalde, Texas, and the N.R.A. went on with its convention in the state shortly
afterward.
After
Columbine, the organization mobilized against a renewed push for gun control.
It had a new lawmaker-director to help: Mr. Barr, who had joined the board in
1997.
Mr. Barr
congratulated Mr. LaPierre on his speech at the N.R.A.’s Denver convention
after the Columbine shooting.
A staunchly
conservative lawyer with a libertarian bent, Mr. Barr was among the House
Republicans to lead the impeachment of Mr. Clinton. He served on the Judiciary
Committee, which has major sway over gun legislation, and proved an eager
addition to the N.R.A. leadership.
Mr. Barr
wrote to another director with a standing offer to use his Capitol Hill office
to ensure that any “information you have is cranked into the legislative
equation.” Mr. Barr’s chief of staff sent the congressman a memo saying the gun
group wanted him to review the agenda for a meeting on the “upcoming
legislative session” and “make any changes or additions.”
The
post-Columbine legislative battle centered on a bill to extend three-day
background checks to private sales at gun shows, something the N.R.A.
vigorously opposed, saying most weekend shows ended before a check could be
completed. In the Senate, Mr. Craig engineered an amendment softening the
impact, and Mr. Barr worked the House, earning them praise at an N.R.A. board
meeting as “two people that put our best foot forward.”
The N.R.A.
also turned to an old hand: Mr. Dingell.
Together,
they came up with another amendment that narrowed the gun shows affected and
required background checks to be completed in 24 hours or else the sale would
go through. Publicly, Mr. Dingell argued that the shortened time window was
reasonable.
But his
papers include notes explaining that while most background checks are done
quickly, some take up to three days because the buyer “has been charged with a
crime” and court records are needed. Gun shows mostly happen on weekends, when
courthouses “are, of course, closed.”
“It is
becoming increasingly tougher to make our case that 24 hours is indeed enough
time to do the check,” a member of Mr. Dingell’s staff wrote to an N.R.A.
lobbyist.
Nevertheless,
Mr. Dingell succeeded in amending the bill. He tried to win over his fellow
Democrats with a baldly partisan message: “We’re doing this so that we can
become the majority again. Very simply, we need Democrats who can carry the
districts where these matters are voting issues.”
But his
colleagues pulled their support. Representative Zoe Lofgren, a California
Democrat who fought for the stronger bill, said she believed Mr. Dingell was
“trying to make progress, and had, he felt, some credibility with the N.R.A.
that might allow him to do that.”
“Even
though what he wanted to do was far from what I wanted to do,” she said.
At the
N.R.A., the collapse of the bill was seen as a victory. An internal report
cited Mr. Dingell’s “masterful leadership.” A year later the group honored him
with a “legislative achievement award.”
‘We Can Help’
Despite the
victories, Mr. Barr saw bigger problems ahead. In memos to Mr. LaPierre in late
1999, he warned that the “entire debate on firearms has shifted” and advised
holding “an “issues summit.”
Specifically,
he pointed to civil lawsuits seeking to hold the firearms industry liable for
making and marketing guns used in violent crimes. Gun control advocates saw
them as a way around the political stalemate in Washington — Smith &
Wesson, for instance, chose to voluntarily adopt new standards to safeguard
children and deter theft.
Mr. Barr
had introduced a bill that would protect gun companies from such lawsuits, but
lamented that “I have received absolutely zero interest, much less support,
from the firearms industry.”
“We can
help the industry through our efforts here in the Congress,” he wrote.
Mr. Craig
took up the issue in the Senate, drafting legislation that mirrored Mr. Barr’s
House bill. After Mr. Barr lost re-election in 2002, a new version of his
liability law was sponsored by others, with N.R.A. guidance. To draw support
from moderates, an incentive was added mandating that child safety locks be
included when a handgun is sold, but N.R.A. talking points assured allies that
the provision “does not require any gun owner to actually use the device.”
The
political climate shifted enough under President George W. Bush and the
Republican-controlled Congress that the assault weapons ban of 1994, which had
a 10-year limit, was allowed to sunset, and the gun industry’s liability shield
finally passed in 2005. The twin developments helped turbocharge the firearms
market.
The private
equity firm Cerberus Capital soon began buying up makers of AR-15 semiautomatic
rifles and aggressively marketing them as manhood-affirming accessories, part
of a sweeping change in the way military-style weapons were pitched to the
public. The number of AR-15-type rifles produced and imported annually would
skyrocket from 400,000 in 2006 to 2.8 million by 2020.
Asked about
his early role in pressing the N.R.A. for help with the liability law, Mr. Barr
said he believed the legal threat was significant enough “that the Congress
step in.”
“The rights
that are front and center for the N.R.A., the Second Amendment, are very much
under attack and need to be defended,” Mr. Barr said. “And I defended them both
as a member of Congress in that capacity and in my private capacity as a member
of the N.R.A. board.”
Sensitivities
With each
new mass shooting in the 2000s, pressure built on Congress to act, and the
politics of gun rights became more polarized.
The N.R.A.
lost another of its directors in Congress — Mr. Craig was arrested for lewd
conduct in an airport men’s room and chose not to run again in 2008. But by
then, the group’s aggressive use of campaign donations and candidate “report
cards” had achieved a virtual lock on Republican caucuses.
That left
Mr. Dingell increasingly marginalized in the gun debate. For a time, his
connections were useful to Democrats; in 2007, after the shooting deaths of 32
people at Virginia Tech, he helped secure N.R.A. support to strengthen the
collection of mental health records for background checks.
But by
December 2012, when Adam Lanza, 20, shot to death 20 children and six adults at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, any vestige of good will between
the N.R.A. and Democrats was gone. When House Democrats created a Gun Violence
Prevention Task Force, they included the 86-year-old Mr. Dingell as one of 11
vice chairs, but his input was limited.
Notes from
a task force meeting in January 2013 show that when it was Mr. Dingell’s turn
to speak, he joked that he was the “skunk at the picnic” who had set up the
N.R.A.’s lobbying operation — the “reason it’s so good.” He went on to
underscore the rights of hunters and defend the N.R.A., saying it was “not the
Devil.”
A few days
earlier, he had privately conferred with N.R.A. representatives. Handwritten
notes show that they discussed congressional support for new restrictions and
the N.R.A.’s desire to delay legislation:
“Need to
buy time to put together package can vote for, and get support, also for
sensitivities to die down,” the notes said.
Three
months later, a bipartisan gun control proposal failed after implacable
resistance from the N.R.A. It was not until June 2022, after the Uvalde
shooting, that a major firearms bill was passed — the first in almost 30 years.
The legislation, which had minimal Republican support and fell far short of
what Democrats had sought, required more private gun sellers to obtain licenses
and perform background checks, and funded state “red flag” laws allowing the
police to seize firearms from dangerous people.
By the time
Mr. Dingell retired from the House in 2015, his views on gun policy had
evolved, according to his wife, who said he no longer trusted the N.R.A.
“I can’t
tell you how many nights I heard him talking to people about how the N.R.A. was
going too far, how they didn’t understand the times,” Ms. Dingell said. “He was
a deep believer in the Second Amendment, and at the end he still deeply
believed, but he also saw the world was changing.”
In June
2016, after 49 people were killed in a mass shooting at an Orlando, Fla.,
nightclub, Ms. Dingell joined fellow Democrats in occupying the House floor as
a protest. When she gave a speech, in the middle of the night, she broached the
difference of opinion on guns she had with her husband.
“You all
know how much I love John Dingell. He’s the most important thing in my life,”
she said. “And yet for 35 years, there’s been a source of tension between the
two of us.”
Mr.
Dingell, too, briefly addressed that tension in a memoir published shortly
before he died. He recalled that as he watched a recording of his wife’s speech
the following morning, “I thought about all the votes I’d taken, all the bills
I’d supported,” and “whether the gun debate had gotten too polarized.”
“As Debbie
had said with such passion the night before, ‘Can’t we have a discussion?’” he
wrote. “And I thought about the role I know I played in contributing to that
polarization.”
Julie Tate
contributed research.
Mike
McIntire is an investigative reporter. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 2022 for his
reporting on the hidden financial incentives behind police traffic stops, and
has written in depth on campaign finance, gun violence and corruption in
college sports. More about Mike McIntire
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