GOP candidates tread cautiously on gun issues in Kentucky

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Republican gubernatorial candidate Daniel Cameron, right, speaks with voters after a campaign rally in Louisville, Ky., Wednesday, April 12, 2023. Cameron reaffirmed his support for gun rights in the aftermath of the mass shooting in Louisville. (AP Photo/Bruce Schreiner)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. ā€“ Kentucky Republicans running for governor have deflected questions about gun legislation since this week's mass shooting at a Louisville bank, turning instead to prayer and a focus on mental health.

While GOP candidates were treading cautiously on a core issue for many Republican voters, professing strong support for gun rights, some prominent Democrats spoke forcefully for action after the shooting Monday in which a bank employee used an assault-style rifle to kill five coworkers. Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg implored state lawmakers to give his city ā€” long plagued by gun violence ā€” more authority to shape its gun policies.

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ā€œThis is about life and death,ā€ Greenberg said this week. ā€œThis is about preventing tragedies.ā€

Republicans running for governor, meanwhile, steered clear of a stand taken by GOP Gov. Bill Lee in neighboring Tennessee. Responding to the recent shooting deaths of three children and three adults at a Christian elementary school in Nashville, Lee called on his state's GOP legislative majorities to pass a measure that would keep firearms away from people who could harm themselves or others.

Kentucky also has no such requirement, commonly known as a ā€œred flagā€ law.

Asked if he would support such a measure for Kentucky, Republican gubernatorial hopeful Daniel Cameron said Wednesday: ā€œYou know Iā€™m very strong on the Second Amendment. And obviously there will be a point where we have a discussion about if anything needs to be done.ā€

For now, the focus should be on the shooting victims, said Cameron, the state's attorney general.

That same day, Kelly Craft, a chief rival for the GOP gubernatorial nomination in Kentuckyā€™s May 16 primary, declared: ā€œI am not going to touch the Second Amendment.ā€ Craft said the focus should be on bolstering mental health services ā€” from schools to businesses.

ā€œWe need to make certain that thereā€™s not a stigma around mental health," Craft, a former United Nations ambassador under ex-President Donald Trump, told reporters at a campaign event in Elizabethtown. ā€œThat there are resources for every person in every corner of our state to have access to mental healthā€ support.

State Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles, another GOP gubernatorial candidate, also emphasized investments in mental health services, pointing to a rural program he has championed. As for gun policies, anything considered "needs to respect our individual rights, freedoms and liberties,ā€ he said.

Another gubernatorial hopeful, state Auditor Mike Harmon, opposes red flag laws, saying they ā€œcan at times be used to take guns from innocent people just trying to defend themselves and their families.ā€

Their comments reflected consistent stands by Republican majorities in advancing pro-gun policies in Kentucky's Legislature. Earlier this year, lawmakers passed a measure declaring the state a ā€œSecond Amendment Sanctuary,ā€ prohibiting local and state police from enforcing any federal firearm regulation banning guns, ammunition or firearm accessories that took effect in January 2021 after Democrat Joe Biden was sworn-in as president.

Kentucky Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, who counts himself as a strong Second Amendment supporter, spoke favorably of a red flag law. One of the governor's closest friends was killed in the Monday bank shooting. Beshear is seeking reelection to a second term this year.

ā€œI believe we can respect and honor peopleā€™s Second Amendment rights to protect themselves and their family, but at the same time at least take a step so that we can intervene when we know somebody is about to go out and murder a whole bunch of people,ā€ the governor said in a CNN interview that aired Wednesday night.

Such measures have ā€œevery check on it that we could ask for,ā€ Beshear said, noting the process involves the court system to ensure ā€œeverybodyā€™s rights are protected, that evidence is heard.ā€

The governor also emphasized early intervention through mental health services.

ā€œWeā€™ve got to start making sure that people are getting help as theyā€™re dealing with things long before it reaches this point,ā€ he told CNN. "Because we always try to rewind time and figure out when we could have stepped in. Well, I think the answer ought to be as early as possible.ā€

Two proposals backed by Greenberg, the Louisville mayor, drew a sympathetic response from a fellow mayor who is running for governor. The request for more local control in setting gun policy is reasonable, said Republican candidate Alan Keck, mayor of Somerset in southern Kentucky,

ā€œGovernment closest to the people is best,ā€ Keck said. ā€œCertainly what is needed in Louisville is often different than what is needed in Somerset.ā€

But Keck cautioned: ā€œAs local leaders, we must always be mindful of the U.S. Constitution and ensure the legislation we propose does not violate it.ā€

Keck said he agreed with Greenberg on changing a state law that now requires that seized guns used in violent crimes be auctioned to the public. Getting rid of such weapons would help ā€œin bringing comfort and peaceā€ to families who lost loved ones through violent crimes, Keck said.

Asked about allowing Louisville to enact its own gun measures, Cameron replied, ā€œI donā€™t support gun control." He gave a similar answer when asked about the proposal dealing with guns used in crimes.

Twelve candidates are competing for the stateā€™s Republican nomination for governor.

One candidate, Eric Deters, said the solution includes more guns, the Lexington Herald-Leader reported.

ā€œThe solution for safety, to me, is we have to do better on mental health and we have to have the good guys with guns everywhere,ā€ Deters said.

At a campaign rally Wednesday in suburban Louisville, Cameron led the audience in prayer ā€” mentioning victimsā€™ families, law enforcement and health care workers who treated the wounded.

Democratic leaders welcomed prayers following the tragedy, but U.S. Rep. Morgan McGarvey, who represents Louisville, said ā€œwe need to take this grief and turn it into action."

ā€œWe need policies in place that will keep this from happening again,ā€ McGarvey, a Democrat, said at a news conference. "So that ā€˜thoughts and prayersā€™ do not have to be offered to yet another community ripped apart by the savage violence coming from guns.ā€


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