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3 lawmakers seek ban on ‘assault weapons’

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border. Is it at the very top of the list of what I think is the most e ective policy we can pass to save lives? Probably not. But with that said, again, I support it.”

BY JESSE PAUL THE COLORADO SUN

ree Democratic state lawmakers are preparing to introduce legislation banning so-called assault weapons in Colorado in response to the mass shootings that have plagued the state.

But to get the bill into law they’ll need the signature of Gov. Jared Polis, who is already signaling that he’s not keen on the idea.

Polis refused on Jan. 17 to directly answer questions from e Colorado Sun about his views on the proposal. e Democrat said he is focused on strengthening the state’s red ag law, which lets judges order the temporary seizure of guns from people deemed a signi cant risk to themselves and others, and creating policy around “ghost guns,” which are home-manufactured rearms without serial numbers.

“We’re happy to discuss other ideas from Republicans and Democrats about how we can improve gun safety in Colorado and honor our Second Amendment rights as citizens of the United States of America,” he said.

Democrats in the legislature, who have historic majorities in the Senate and House, are planning

• To provide support and empathy in an inclusive environment.

• To provide help for those in need in our community.

• To operate a food pantry in the Golden area for the benefit of local families and individuals.

• To provide short-term financial assistance to those experiencing crisis or sudden hardship between when someone purchases a e 2023 lawmaking term could be the most consequential in Colorado history when it comes to tightening the state’s gun regulations. And the changes could come despite the promise of a backlash from gun advocates. In 2013, Democratic lawmakers were punished after passing a slate of gun laws in the wake of the Aurora shooting. Voters successfully recalled two Democratic state senators, and a Democratic senator resigned to avoid being voted out of o ce.

• To provide consultation and advice regarding additional support services in the vicinity.

It wasn’t until 2019 that Democrats began pursuing and passing gun control legislation again in Colorado.

With the political ghost of 2013 still looming, albeit not as large, over the Capitol, it’s unclear — beyond Polis — how much support there is among Democratic state lawmakers for a ban on what they call assault weapons. e idea has been swirling around the legislature for years but a bill has never been introduced because there hasn’t been the political will to pass such a measure

Senate President Steve Fenberg, D-Boulder, said during e Sun’s legislative preview event in the week of Jan. 8 that he would vote “yes” on a bill banning so-called assault weapons if given the chance. But he also said it isn’t the top gun control priority and that he worries it may “(make) us lose the message and maybe lose the argument around what e ective gun violence prevention can be in Colorado.”

“Our job is to pass policy, not just support an idea or not,” he said. “I think there are some complications with exactly how to make that policy e ective. Whatever we do in one state is not going to change what somebody does right across the ere are three Democrats working on the bill: Reps. Andrew Boesenecker of Fort Collins and Elisabeth Epps of Denver and Sen. Rhonda Fields of Aurora. e measure will be introduced in the coming days or weeks.

Boesenecker told e Sun the week of Jan. 8 that he wasn’t ready to talk about the bill because the sponsors are still working on the policy. He said that a draft version of the legislation posted on Twitter by Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, a hard-line gun rights group, did not re ect changes that have been made to the measure.

Boesnecker explained that one key challenge in drafting Colorado’s policy compared with what has been done in other states is that the Colorado legislation can’t list speci c makes and models of rearms that would be outlawed. e legislature has a policy against naming companies in legislation. Instead, he explained, the Colorado bill must describe rearm features to de ne the types of weapons that are and are not allowed.

Fields con rmed she will be a lead sponsor on the bill and said “we are still making adjustments.”

Epps walked away from a Sun reporter who tried to talk with her last week, saying she didn’t have time for a conversation then or in the near future. She also didn’t respond to two text messages Jan. 18 seeking an interview. Epps, however, recently tweeted a video of lawmakers in the Illinois legislature celebrating the passage of an assault weapons ban. “You love to see it,” was her caption.

According to Gi ords, a group that advocates for tighter gun regulations, there are fewer than a dozen states with so-called assault weapons bans. ey include California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York.

Gun rights groups and Republicans are already lining up against the Colorado measure.

“Contact your Colorado lawmakers and urge them to VOTE NO!” Rocky Mountain Gun Owners said in their tweet leaking the draft version of the bill. e post called Boesenecker, Epps and Fields “tyrants.” e Colorado State Shooting Association said in an email to supporters that they plan to le a lawsuit to invalidate the legislation should it be signed into law. e group said the legislation “only disarms and removes rights from responsible gun owners.”

(Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, a Democrat, told e Sun the week of Jan. 8 that his o ce is “committed to working with the legislature o ering them guidance as to how to create laws that pass constitutional muster.”)

Democrats have large majorities in the House and Senate, and so they don’t need the GOP’s help to pass a ban on so-called assault

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