MILWAUKEE (AP) — After signing two bills that loosen Wisconsin’s gun laws, Gov. Scott Walker defended the timing of his public event Wednesday, saying it had been scheduled before nine people were shot and killed last week in a South Carolina church.
With his signature, the all-but-certain Republican presidential candidate eliminated the state’s 48-hour waiting period for handgun purchases and allowed off-duty, retired and out-of-state police officers to carry firearms on school grounds. Both measures passed earlier this month in the GOP-majority Legislature with bipartisan support.
The timing of the bill signing comes amid a renewed debate over gun control and race relations after the fatal shootings at a Charleston, South Carolina, black church on June 17; a white man faces multiple murder charges.
Walker said the bill-signing event was scheduled on June 11. After June 30, the measures would have become law without his signature.
“If we had pulled back on this, I think it would have given people the erroneous opinion that what we signed into law today had anything to do with what happened in Charleston,” Walker said at the ceremony, held at the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s office.
The governor said the country’s focus should be on the families affected by the shooting and on condemning the shooter.
“We need to denounce not just the acts, but to denounce the beliefs that he had. This was a racist, evil man who needs to be called out … this should be unacceptable in America,” Walker said.
The governor, who was joined Wednesday by Republican lawmakers and families who supported the measures, has been an outspoken supporter of gun rights. Walker previously made Wisconsin the 49th state to legalize concealed carry — even in state buildings — and signed a “castle doctrine” bill giving homeowners more legal protections if they shoot an intruder.
He also has a 100 percent rating from the National Rifle Association and spoke at the NRA’s annual meeting in April. The NRA in a statement Wednesday called the bills’ signing a “victory for gun rights in Wisconsin.”
Ten states and the District of Columbia impose some form of waiting period for buying handguns, according to the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. Wisconsin’s 48-hour period has been in effect since 1976.
Supporters of eliminating the waiting period said it’ll better allow people to protect themselves, while opponents said it would lead to people caught up in fits of rage or depression to obtain weapons quickly. Supporters also say it inconveniences law-abiding citizens, that background checks can be completed in hours and women would be able to get guns faster to protect themselves and their families from abusers.
Backers of allowing off-duty and retired police officers to carry concealed weapons at schools said it would create another line of defense for students and teachers if a shooter attacks. Opponents said allowing non-uniformed officers to carry guns at schools could scare students.
The new laws will take effect Friday.
___
Associated Press writer Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, contributed to this report. Follow Dana Ferguson on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/bydanaferguson
Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
“signed a “castle doctrine” bill giving homeowners more legal protections if they shoot an intruder.”
THis just in: UPS and FedEx workers unions demand flak jackets for black and minority employees. Story at 10.
Just as soon as you tell us where all the Good Guys with Guns are when it comes to stopping stuff like Charleston. You still haven’t answered that question.
But a woman still has a waiting period if she needs an abortion.
Women in Wisconsin have to wait longer for the constitutionally protected right to end a pregnancy than a person has to
wait to get a gun.
All the news of shootings in Charleston and right-wing pols blathering from sides of their mouth has obscured the reals news of the day; Bobby Jindal announced today he’s running. Was that a thud I just heard?