TY - BOOK AU - Charles,Patrick J. TI - Vote gun: how gun rights became politicized in the United States SN - 0231208847 AV - HV7436 .C49 2023 U1 - 363.330973 23/eng/20221123 PY - 2023///] CY - New York PB - Columbia University Press KW - Firearms KW - Government policy KW - United States KW - Gun control KW - Political aspects KW - Public opinion N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; "A shot sure to be heard around Congress" --; The rise of the "gun lobby" --; The great "gun lobby" awakening --; A political synopsis of the great "gun lobby" awakening --; The evolution of the NRA and firearms control politics --; 1968 : firearms control becomes an election issue --; 1969-1970 : the "no compromise" gun rights movement arrives --; 1971-1974 : firearms control politics and the Saturday Night Special --; 1974-1980 : the gun rights reformation N2 - "After John F. Kennedy was shot and killed with a rifle purchased through a mail-order magazine, Congress enacted and President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the 1968 Gun Control Act (GCA), regulating firearms under interstate commerce. The politics of firearms controls suddenly underwent a formative transformation. Though the politics of firearms controls date as far back as the late nineteenth century, and though the first gun rights movement was actively lobbying lawmakers by the early to mid-twentieth century, it was not until the enactment of the GCA that lawmakers began to stake out any firm firearms control policy positions, and subsequently make these positions part of their election campaigns. From that point onward, lawmakers increasingly outlined their respective firearms control positions, and over time political coalitions began to form. Vote Gun tells the story of this transformation from the early twentieth century through the 1980 elections. However, most of the book centers on the events immediately leading up to and following the GCA. Specific attention is given to how the passage of the GCA made firearms controls a wedge voting issue, as well as how three presidents--Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Jimmy Carter--handled the issue of firearms controls politically. The book closes by examining how the 1980 elections cemented the partisan divisions over firearms controls that remain to this day."-- ER -