In response to this week’s launch of a new gun control organization consisting of state legislators from all 50 states, plus Puerto Rico, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA) today called on the American State Legislators for Gun Violence Prevention (ASLGVP) to immediately publish a roster of their members, and disclose their funding sources.
“Private lobbying organizations might expect to have some degree of privacy but when an organization consists of elected public officials, there must be complete transparency,” said CCRKBA Chairman Alan M. Gottlieb. The public deserves to know who belongs to this organization, and who is providing financial support.”
Gottlieb noted that the group’s mailing address is at a Post Office box in New York City’s Madison Square Station.
According to a release issued by CCRKBA Reuters reported that the ASLGVP had not release information on its preliminary donors, acknowledging only that fundraising efforts are in progress. Another report said that the group had not yet published a list of members, said to number around 200 lawmakers, over concerns about “political backlash.” The group was launched by Democratic New York Assemblyman Brian Kavanagh.
“If these state lawmakers are worried about political backlash back home,” “they must have good reason for that, said Gottlieb. Reports say Kavanagh founded this group because Congress has not adopted certain gun control measures. This has become the argument of the gun prohibition lobby. They failed to pressure Congress, so now the strategy is to attack gun rights at the state level, where presumably members of this new anti-gun lawmakers group will push their gun control agenda through the state legislatures.
“Frankly elected officials promoting an agenda to erode state and federal constitutional rights, as members of a New York-based group whose roster is apparently secret, ought to expect some political backlash, said Gottlieb.
“Gun owners in all 50 states deserve to know, before legislative sessions begin next month, which lawmakers in their states will be pushing this new group’s agenda,” Gottlieb concluded. “And they also deserve to know who is paying for it.”