Analysis: What the TX-23 Runoff Says About the Gun Vote [Member Exclusive]
Even in defeat, gun rights voters proved they can still make the candidates they target sweat.
Even in defeat, gun rights voters proved they can still make the candidates they target sweat.
Plus, we talk about the gun politics effect of Trump’s convictions on the news update.
Plus, federal litigator Gabriel Malor joins the podcast to discuss the practical implications of Donald Trump becoming a prohibited person
Donald Trump was convicted of 34 felonies on Thursday. He can no longer possess guns. That outcome was certainly foreseeable, given how many felony indictments he faced and still does. But this eventuality wasn’t broached by gun-rights groups or Trump’s primary opponents in the leadup to his nomination.
A jury convicted former president and current Republican nominee Donald J. Trump of 34 felonies on Thursday, which will bar him from possessing firearms.
New York’s attempts to push financial institutions to drop their relationships with the National Rifle Association over the group’s pro-gun views ran afoul of the Constitution.
Despite questioning their effectiveness, a Republican Governor has given the green light to new gun-control measures.
The Texas Republican who represents Uvalde, and voted for the new gun restrictions in response to the 2022 mass shooting there barely survived a primary challenge on Tuesday.
On the eve of trial, Hunter Biden’s legal team has taken aim at what it means to be an “addict” for purposes of federal law, while shifting Second Amendment jurisprudence continues to shadow his prosecution.
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