Gun lobby pulls trigger on Biden’s ATF nominee

Gun Rights

The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set newsroom policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or on bangordailynews.com.

Griffin Dix is co-chair of the Brady Campaign to End Gun Violence chapter in Oakland, California. His son was shot and killed in 1994. This column was produced for The Progressive magazine and distributed by Tribune News Service.

In a case that shows the enduring power of the U.S. gun lobby, on Sept. 9 President Joe Biden was forced to withdraw his nomination of David Chipman as director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Chipman was well-qualified for the job. He served 25 years as an ATF special agent, and received a prestigious award from the U.S. Department of Justice for his contribution to community partnerships around public safety. But all of the Republican senators — and a few Democratic ones, and an independent, from rural states — opposed him.

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At Chipman’s Senate Judiciary Committee nomination hearing, he indicated that he would enforce the nation’s (weak) federal gun laws and work to reduce gun trafficking.

He was grilled by senators about a comment he’d jokingly made the previous year that during the pandemic, among the large number of first-time gun purchasers, some were buying guns in preparation “for end times and zombie apocalypses.” It was blunt but true.

In fact, the unprecedented surge in gun sales overwhelmed the background check system. So many people were purchasing guns that nearly 600,000 background checks on buyers could not be completed within the three-day limit. That allowed many dangerous felony criminals, who could not legally purchase or own guns, to obtain them.

Moreover, unregulated online gun sales had also skyrocketed, along with the sale of do-it-yourself ghost guns, which have no serial number and cannot be traced.

According to ATF, about 30 percent of guns recovered from crime scenes in California, as of 2019, were unserialized. As more people bought guns, many of which were unregulated, gun homicides increased. The Gun Violence Archive recorded 4,000 more gun homicides in 2020 than in 2019.

To block Chipman’s nomination, Donald Trump Jr. and the corporate gun lobby spent millions on TV, radio and internet disinformation campaigns attacking Chipman and his family.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Montana called him “an anti-Second Amendment, gun-grabbing radical that should not lead the agency that regulates firearms.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell agreed: “Absurd that a vocal opponent of Americans’ constitutional rights was ever picked to run ATF.”

This is nonsense. The real point of opposing Chipman’s nomination, it seems, was not to protect the Second Amendment, but to protect gun trafficking. It was to make sure the gun industry can sell as many guns as possible, even to dangerous “prohibited persons” who cannot legally purchase them.

Soon you’ll hear the same senators who would not confirm Chipman complain about crime being rampant in our streets and cities. But when they had a chance to do something about it, they didn’t.

The gun lobby spends its money spreading the idea of a stark divide between “anti-gun” people and gun owners, who are its members. It’s a myth.

Most gun owners do not belong to the NRA, and most gun owners disagree with the gun lobby. Almost three-fourths of gun owners favor making private gun sales and sales at gun shows subject to background checks.

We all want to be safe. The undoing of David Chipman’s nomination makes us less so.

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