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[[Image:Rtc.gif|thumb|220px|right|The spread of [[shall issue]] and [[may issue]] laws in the United States. In 1998, when Proposition B was proposed, there were 30 shall issue states and 12 may issue states. ]]
[[Image:Rtc.gif|thumb|220px|right|The spread of [[shall issue]] and [[may issue]] laws in the United States. In 1998, when Proposition B was proposed, there were 30 shall issue states and 12 may issue states. ]]
'''Proposition B in Missouri''' was a failed ballot measure that would have required local police authorities to issue concealed weapons permits to eligible citizens. It was contentious and failed narrowly, leading the legislature to eventually approve similar legislation in 2003.
'''Proposition B in Missouri''' was a failed ballot measure that would have required local police authorities to issue concealed weapons permits to eligible citizens. It was contentious and failed narrowly, leading the legislature to eventually approve similar legislation in 2003.

Revision as of 16:19, 18 September 2006


The spread of shall issue and may issue laws in the United States. In 1998, when Proposition B was proposed, there were 30 shall issue states and 12 may issue states.

Proposition B in Missouri was a failed ballot measure that would have required local police authorities to issue concealed weapons permits to eligible citizens. It was contentious and failed narrowly, leading the legislature to eventually approve similar legislation in 2003.

Supporters

Support for concealed carry laws in Missouri grew gradually throughout the 1990s. In 1991, a group to promote such laws called "the conference" was formed and that nickname was used until the Missouri Legislative Issues Council (MOLIC) was formed in 1995 for official recognition. Support for these laws increased in part as a response to the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act and other efforts make legal gun ownership more difficult.

After author/columnist John Ross made his attempts to convince Missouri legislators, other supporters also emerged. The NRA formed Missourians Against Crime(MAC) in 1998 as their spokesman into Missouri. This caused the MOLIC membership to be transformed into the Missourians for Personal Safety(MPS) for the 1999 Proposition B campaign with Steve McGhee as the President. These combined efforts brought notoriety to Greg Jeffery, attorney/author Kevin Jamison, and Tim Oliver, to the forefront of their local/regional news media. As the Missouri Sport Shooting Association (MSSA), joined (unofficially) in support, they all proceeded with their regional campaigning attempts. Eventually, more and more individuals heard of these volunteers/members and took up the task to support the proposition with smaller meetings and neighborhood 'grass roots' action groups.

Police Officers generally supported the measure: "In a recent poll, more than eighty-five percent of our 1352 members favored Right-to-Carry.", Letter to St. Louis Police Chief Ron Henderson, from Sgt. John J. Johnson, President St. Louis Police Officers Association, 1/23/99."[1]

The Gateway Civil Liberties Alliance (GCLA) arose after the failure to pass the proposition in 1999; forming itself from MOLIC, MPS, and with WMSA giving support, to become the leadership and legislative clearing house for the 2003 success in passing a shall-issue law. Frequent trips to Jefferson City by Greg Jeffery (GCLA cofounder) earned him the nickname ‘braintrust’ to a newly created law that was adopted by Missouri in 2003.[2]

Opponents

Handgun Control, Inc., saw this as their test case before the elections in 2000 to exercise their political influence[3] and lobbied hard to defeat the referendum.[4] Political notables included the Clinton/Gore Administration with Attorney General Janet Reno playing a secondary role to Hillary Clinton's activism, Governor Mel Carnahan and his daughter Robin Carnahan, the 1994 appointed[5] Secretary of State, Rebecca Cook,[6] and State Auditor, Claire McCaskill.

Robin Carnahan chaired the Safe Schools and Workplaces Committee (SSWC) and orchestrated television ads against the proposition. Also, on the weekend prior to voting day, coordinated the taped phone message from Hillary Clinton to automatically dial 75,000 homes statewide with the message, "just too dangerous for Missouri families."[7]

Ballot Language

The General Assembly approved the following ballot language:

"Shall state or local law enforcement agencies be authorized to issue permits to law-abiding citizens at least twenty-one years of age to carry concealed firearms outside their home for personal protection after having passed a state and federal criminal background check and having completed a firearms safety training course approved by the Missouri Department of Public Safety? "

After a lawsuit filed by the opponents of the measure, the language was changed. The final text read:

"Shall sheriffs, or in the case of St. Louis County, the chief of police, be required to issue permits to carry concealed firearms to citizens who apply if various statutory requirements are satisfied?" Because of the discretion given to local law enforcement to verify the accuracy of applications, the costs are uncertain. Application fees are estimated to cover most costs for the first three years. Subsequently, local governments, as a whole, may incur costs from $500,000 to $1,000,000 annually, not covered by fees."

Missouri Sport Shooting Association President Kevin Jamison described it as, "The opposition conducted a poll of the ballot language which determined that 60% of the state would vote in favor of License to Carry. Outraged that the people might "speak wrong", the Governor's lawyer filed a suit with the Missouri Supreme Court to change the ballot language. The defendants in the suit were Attorney General Jay Nixon and State Auditor Claire McCaskill."[8]

Campaign Controversies

The use of official goverment resources by opponents of the measure was controversial.

"Missouri's two US Attorneys are using the Justice Department's name and facilities to lobby against the state's concealed weapons ballot issue. Using official department letterhead, the attorneys, Edward Dowd and Stephen Hill, urged sheriffs and police chiefs across the state to rally resistance against Proposition B, which is on the ballot this April. Dowd's office is operating an 800 number which people can call to obtain anti-prop B campaigning materials. Calls to the 800 number, 1-800-214-2690, are answered with "US Attorneys Office." " [9]

Some advertisments used in the campaign were deceptive, praticularly an opposition ad that implied Missourians would be allowed to carry Uzis[10] that continued into 2000.[11]

Results

File:Moyesbc60x.GIF
1999 voting results.

Proposition B failed by a margin of 3.3%.[12]

The majority of voters in rural Missouri voted in favor of Proposition B. However, urban voters, praticularly in St. Louis and Kansas City, tipped the balance against Proposition B. 74.1% of the voters in the city of St. Louis, 69.5% in St. Louis County, and 71.6% in Kansas City opposed Proposition B.[12]

In 2003, the Missouri General Assembly passed new laws to enable shall-issue permits.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Right To Carry: The Law Enforcement Perspective". MOCCW. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  2. ^ a b Jamison, Kevin (17 September, 2003). "License to carry update". Western Missouri Shooters Alliance. Retrieved 2006-09-10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ 1983 The Center to Prevent Handgun Violence (CPHV), an educational outreach organization dedicated to reducing gun violence, is founded as a sister organization to HCI. (source: HCI)
  4. ^ "Who paid to fight Prop. B?". MOCCW. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  5. ^ "Facts on women candidates and elected officials". Center for American Women and Politics. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  6. ^ There was debate to which office held more influence between Secretary of State and/or the State Auditor. Most agree the Secretary of State had the authority to change the ballot language used (without review) in 1999.
  7. ^ "NRAFAX Alert - Carnahan defeats Prop. B". MOCCW. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  8. ^ THE MISSOURI MIRACLE by K. L. Jamison
  9. ^ Bellamy, Clayton (March 23, 1999). "US Attorneys use federal facilities to lobby against prop B". Missouri Digital News. Retrieved 2006-09-13.
  10. ^ "MOCCW Top 5 Misleading Statements". MOCCW. Retrieved 2006-09-14.
  11. ^ May 4, 2000: HCI releases a new television ad featuring video footage of a senior NRA official boasting that, if George W. Bush is elected President, the NRA will be working out of the White House. (source: HCI)
  12. ^ a b "Table of County Vote Totals". MOCCW. Retrieved 2006-09-13.