WASHINGTON POST
Today marks the 20th anniversary of the Brady Handgun Violence
Prevention Act, which went into effect in 1994. The law -- named after
James Brady, who was shot during an attempted assassination of President
Ronald Reagan in 1981 -- made background checks a requirement for gun
purchases from licensed dealers. From the law's passage until 2009 --
the latest year statistics are available -- over 107 million
Brady-mandated background checks were conducted.
Gun politics have also changed since the passage of the Brady bill. Here are a few notable examples.
1. When gun policy gets passed, it's usually about loosening gun restrictions, not tightening them.
The New York Times did a study in December 2013 analyzing gun policy
since the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School the previous year, a
year when 71 other children were killed by
gun violence. Around the country, 1,500 state gun bills were proposed, 109 became law, and
70 of those new laws loosened existing gun legislation. According to a Gallup poll from January 30, 2014,
55 percent of Americans are dissatisfied with existing gun policy.
2. 242 members of the House had an "A rating" from the National Rifle Association in December 2012.
46 senators did.
3. In 2013, a plan to expand background checks failed.
Fifty-four senators were for it, 46 were against -- and it couldn't pass without a
60-vote threshold. Only
56 senators
voted yes on the Brady bill. The background checks bill, co-sponsored
by Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), would have
required
checks
on all commercial gun sales, and was a part of the big federal push on
gun violence policy after the school shooting in Newtown, Conn. The
president
did sign 25 executive actions related to gun-violence prevention in 2013, however.
4. In 1998, gun violence was seen as the most pressing issue in the country, according to a Gallup survey.
In October 2013,
1 percent of respondents saw violence and crime as the most pressing issue in the country.
5. Opinions of the National Rifle Association are about the same as they were 20 years ago.
December 2012, Gallup
In a 1993 Gallup survey, 55 percent of the country had a favorable opinion of the NRA. At the end of 2012,
54 percent of Americans had a favorable opinion of them.
6. In the 1993-1994 election cycle, the NRA spent $2.3 million.
In the 2011-2012 election cycle, they spent
$24.8 million.
7. New gun-control groups are starting to spend big money, too.
Gabby Giffords, who was shot at a constituent meeting in Arizona in
2011, started Americans for Responsible Solutions, a gun-control focused
501(c)4. The group
raised nearly $12.5 million
this year. Michael Bloomberg started Mayors Against Illegal Guns in
2006. The organization has spent nearly $2 million lobbying
since its formation. According to the
National Journal,
"gun-control groups spent five times as much on federal lobbying in
2013 as they did the year before, but the NRA and others still outpaced
them by more than 7-to-1."
8. In 1993, 34 percent of Americans thought it was more important to protect the right to own guns than control gun ownership.
In 2013,
48 percent of Americans thought that.
9. Firearm homicides reached a peak of 17,075 in 1993.
In 2011, about
9,900 people were murdered by guns, according to FBI data. Statistics from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that 18,253 gun homicides happened in 1993, while 11,078 gun murders occurred in 2010.
10. In October 2011, 47 percent of Americans said they had a gun in the home -- the highest number since 1993.
11. Things that didn't exist in 1994 that politicians have to think about now: online gun sales, 3-D printing and smart guns.