Minnesota House to Drop Universal Background Checks
It appears that the gun control advocates in Minnesota are setting their sights lower and lower:
The House Democrat pushing for broader restrictions to Minnesota gun laws has abandoned imposing universal background checks for firearm sales.
Rep. Michael Paymar of St. Paul says he's switching to a plan that would expand background checks to sales at gun shows but not to private sales and transfers.
I'm not sure how Paymar plans to expand background checks to gun shows but not private sales since the only sales that don't require a background check at gun shows are private ones. Trying to find the logic in a politician's statement is harder than finding unicorns. Why the sudden change of heart? It appears that the change in heart, at least in part, is due to the alternative gun control bill that was offered by gun rights activists:
Paymar says he also plans to include many provisions from the alternate package of less-restrictive gun measures that would tighten the state's current background check system, add to the parameters of who cannot legally own a gun and help county attorneys crack down on illegal gun owners.
It just goes to show that gun control advocates are more than happy to compromise so long as that compromise involves more gun control. I don't know why Minnesota gun owners are expected to suffer more gun control, especially since none of us were involve in the tragedy that sparked the recent gun control debate, but suffer we apparently will.