Missouri Lawmakers Override Veto, Loosen Gun Laws

By and | September 16, 2016

Missouri’s Republican-led Legislature has used its supermajority to significantly loosen the state’s gun laws and potentially tighten its voting requirements as lawmakers overrode numerous vetoes of Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon.

The sweeping guns legislation would allow most adults to carry concealed weapons without needing a permit while also expanding people’s right to defend themselves both in public and private places.

The measure passed with more than the required two-thirds majority in each chamber as Republicans shut off Democratic discussion and enacted the laws on largely party-line votes.

The Republican supermajorities added to Nixon’s record as the most overridden governor in Missouri history, a distinction made possible by an era of extreme political division in the Capitol. Heading into Wednesday, lawmakers had successfully overridden Nixon on 83 bills and budget expenditures over his two terms in office — nearly four times more overrides than the combined total for all other governors dating back to 1820 when Missouri was still a territory.

Nixon vetoed about two dozen measures this year, including ones already overridden this spring blocking pay raises for home-care workers and changing the state’s school funding requirements.

The guns legislation prompted some of the most intense debate.

Democrats asserted it could put racial minorities at a greater risk of being fatally shot.

“The targets in our area are black boys, not pheasants,” said Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal, who represents Ferguson, where sometimes violent protests broke out after the fatal police shooting of black 18-year-old Michael Brown in 2014. The white officer was cleared of wrongdoing by state and federal investigations.

“What I don’t want to get to is the point where there is a trigger-happy police officer or bad Samaritan like Zimmerman who says, ‘Black boy in the hood. Skittles. Let’s Shoot,”‘ Chappelle-Nadal said, a reference to Trayvon Martin, a black 17-year-old who was walking back from a Florida convenience store after buying ice tea and Skittles when he was fatally shot by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in 2012.

Republican said such fears of greater gun violence are misguided.

“The basis of this whole bill is that it allows law-abiding citizens to protect themselves and their families,” Republican sponsor Sen. Brian Munzlinger said.

The override vote means Missouri will join 10 other states with laws that allow most people to carry concealed guns even if they haven’t gone through the training required for permits, according to the National Rifle Association, which supported the legislation.

The measure, described by supporters as “constitutional carry,” allows people to carry hidden guns anywhere they can currently carry weapons openly, effective Jan. 1. People who choose to still get a concealed-carry permit could potentially carry their weapons into places off-limits to others and could take them to states with reciprocal agreements.

The legislation also would create a “stand-your-ground” right, meaning people don’t have a duty to retreat from danger any place they are legally entitled to be present. The NRA says 30 states have laws or court precedents stating people have no duty to retreat from a threat anywhere they are lawfully present. But Missouri’s measure makes it the first new “stand-your-ground” state since 2011.

It also expands the “castle doctrine” by allowing invited guests such as baby sitters to use deadly force if confronted in homes.

Topics Legislation Missouri Gun Liability

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Latest Comments

  • September 19, 2016 at 3:24 pm
    boonedoggle says:
    Betcha the law still prohibits "law abiding" citizens from carrying concealed weapons into their House and Senate Chambers or Courthouses
  • September 19, 2016 at 1:27 pm
    Jax Agent says:
    I don't know all of the facts on this particular bill, but frequently these bills are crammed with all sorts of provisions & add-ons and they are usually an all or nothing... read more
  • September 19, 2016 at 1:25 pm
    Jax Agent says:
    Most states require a background check, but it is only a criminal check. I don't even know if the means exist to check on someone beyond a criminal record.

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