Daily Progress
|
 
Blog
with Bob Gibson
Executive Director of the Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership and former Daily Progress political reporter


By Bob Gibson
Daily Progress political blogger
Del. Robert G. Marshall, R-Manassas, plans to push again Monday for something that fellow Republicans in the House of Delegates just aren’t ready to buy.
Marshall is still pushing a bill to change state concealed-carry bans at universities to show that “potential killers need to know that Virginia’s colleges and universities are not ‘gun free zones’ where no one will be able to stop them from killing as many people as they can.”
Marshall has had a few bad days on the House floor trying to attach his “let college professors and administrators carry a gun” amendment to various bills, only to get shot down time after time by fellow Republicans.
“We are burying students and they are burying legislation,” Marshall said of fellow delegates who kept a couple of Senate bills from coming up for House floor debate last week so that he would not be able to attach his amendment to them.
Twice, fellow Republicans stopped Marshall from attaching his measure to bills through procedural moves, apparently not wanting to take recorded House floor votes on what the Manassas conservative calls his Concealed Carry on Campus legislation.
“A professor or an administrator can have a concealed carry permit” and could safely protect students on a campus, Marshall said. “Even in urban areas, they’d rather have some armed professor try to protect their son or daughter from some lunatic,” he insisted.
That is the kind of debate that a large collection of National Rifle Association A-rated delegates might prefer not to have on the House floor, so Republicans are merely protecting their own by frustrating Marshall’s bid to put a concealed-carry measure up for debate there.
Marshall’s bill to accomplish the same end was left for dead in a House committee without a recorded vote. His House Bill 424 would have allowed “full-time faculty members of state institutions of higher education who possess a valid Virginia concealed handgun permit to carry a concealed handgun on campus.”
Marshall, given the same treatment that the GOP majority gives bills of minority Democrats that Republicans wish to quietly kill, is not one to give up.
On Monday, he plans to hold a 10:30 a.m. news conference to showcase his dead bill and once again.
So far little news has stemmed from the hard-nosed legislative combat that Marshall engages in with fellow Republicans with some relish.
Marshall is sharpening his message for a bid to overtake former Gov. Jim Gilmore for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination that Gilmore hopes to win May 31 at a Richmond statewide GOP convention.

Posted by Matt Rosenberg @ 09:47 AM ·
Next entry: Marshall gains visibility, hits base issues Previous entry: Hager likely to stay on as GOP chair

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( ) on February 29, 2008 at 8:58 pm

It may be a losing proposition, but Bob Marshall is exactly correct on this.

There is nothing sacred about a college campus. If we trust a person to carry a weapon down the street, or into a store, or a restaurant, or on the beach, or in the park, there is no reason to NOT trust them to carry that weapon on a college campus.

We WANT people to have weapons on campus—if we could afford to hire security guards for every single class, we would do it in a heartbeat.

Well, security guards are just paid guns. Citizens with concealed carry permits are volunteers ready to defend themselves and others around them.  One such volunteer prevented a slaughter at a church in Colorado.  Another stopped a man in front of a courthouse from indiscriminately killing possibly a dozen innocent bystanders (at the cost of his own life).

The current “no-gun” policy means that all you can do to protect your fellow citizens is to jump in front of the bullet and hope they guy runs out after he kills you.

Some six-year-old girl did that to save her mother, took six bullets but fortunately survived. At tech, a professor did this saving most of his class, at the cost of his life.  Noble, but if he had had a gun in his desk drawer, he may be alive, along with a couple dozen other students.

But you tell me—why should that teacher, who held that door to save his students and paid for it with his life, NOT be trusted to carry a weapon, concealed or not, into his class—when he would be perfectly trusted to carry that same weapon down the streets of Blacksburg proper?

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( ) on February 29, 2008 at 10:11 am

Del. Marshall needs to continue the fight.  Its not the Democrats that we need to worry about. Its the Republicans not willing to step up that are the problem.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Post a Comment

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.

About
Bob Gibson

Bob Gibson was the Daily Progress political reporter for 17 years and also worked for seven years as city editor after covering the police and court beats. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia who hails from Arlington County. He is currently the Executive Director of the Sorenson Institute for Political Leadership.

Recent Entries
Healing, rebuilding in Rwanda
Football, reading and family
Hard to lead in today’s poisonous atmosphere
Hard to lead in today’s poisonous atmosphere
Mary Ann Elwood: A local ‘force of nature’
Recent Comments
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/10/2012
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/08/2012
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/07/2012
Monthly Archives
January 2012
December 2011
October 2011
September 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
August 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
August 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
Search


Advanced Search

Syndicate


Advertisement

Advertisement