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How
did the Democrats get NRA's blessing?
October
12, 2008 | By
Kevin Woster, Rapid City Journal
In a state that loves guns, the NRA matters in
political campaigns.
That's
especially true in western South Dakota, where
Rapid City dentist Carl Stonecipher and Red Owl
rancher Robert Dennis represent a culture of gun
advocacy that crosses social and economic lines
and pays close attention to the National Rifle
Association endorsements.
The
NRA showed its affection for incumbent Democratic
Sen. Tim Johnson last week with an "A"
rating and an endorsement in his re-election campaign
against Republican state Rep. Joel Dykstra. The
organization has also endorsed incumbent Democratic
Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin -- who has received
an "A" rating from the NRA in all five
or her statewide campaigns -- over Republican
challenger Chris Lien.
In
bagging a double on NRA endorsements, the two
Democrats edged out two Republicans who also got
"A" ratings and might typically expect
to be favored by the gun group. The GOP works
hard to portray itself as the party of the Second
Amendment, and in many cases succeeds. But Johnson
and Herseth Sandlin scored through the power of
incumbency and voting records likely to win approval
from the powerful gun-rights group and its potential
campaign clout in South Dakota.
Dykstra
said his own "A" rating from the NRA
couldn't overcome the weight of Johnson's incumbency.
"They
made it clear they were very unlikely to go away
from the incumbent," Dykstra said.
Dennis,
a political conservative with a strong pro-gun
philosophy, prefers Dykstra and Lien's political
philosophy but won't deny that the NRA endorsement
will be helpful to Johnson at the polls.
"An
endorsement from the NRA will just firm up many
people's convictions that he isn't a bad guy and
has our best interests at heart," Dennis
said. "I think it's pretty important, as
most of us are strong on our Second Amendment
rights in this state. We don't want anyone taking
anything away from us that we feel men and women
have fought and died for."
Johnson
"has many times voted up the middle, so he
gets many of the conservative votes" Dennis
said. He said Herseth Sandlin manages to do the
same.
Johnson's
NRA endorsement strengthened his status as the
favorite in his campaign for a third Senate term.
And Dennis believes it will help shield the incumbent
from possible collateral damage from gun-lover's
angst about presidential candidate Barack Obama,
who will appear above Johnson on the Democratic
side of the state's general-election ballot Nov.
4.
The
NRA has launched edgy attack ads portraying Obama
as a gun-control advocate, who as president would
be likely to mount an assault on Second Amendment
rights. Dennis shares those fears.
Those
speculations also worry Stonecipher, past president
and current director of the local Safari Club
International chapter and an NRA member. He supports
the organization's core beliefs but struggles
to back the group on certain issues, such as the
sale of cheap handguns and so-called cop-killer
ammunition.
"I
don't always agree with the NRA," Stonecipher
said. "I didn't agree on the issue of Teflon-coated,
cop-killer bullets, and I think those Saturday
night specials are junk. There's no reason to
defend those, ever. And the hoodlums end up with
them."
But
Stonecipher does worry about arbitrary "assault-weapon"
designations that outlaw legitimate hunting and
target weapons, and he fears Obama favors restrictions
that could even lead to confiscating some models
of firearms.
And
while admitting that the NRA endorsement counts,
Stonecipher said what really matters is how politicians
live up to that endorsement through their votes.
He thinks Johnson could have a chance to do just
that if he is re-elected and Obama wins the White
House and takes action -- as Stonecipher suspects
he might -- to weaken basic gun rights.
"That's
where those endorsements are going to count. Will
they stand up at that point if he (Obama) is elected
president and say 'no' to what he wants to do?"
Stonecipher said. "That's the real key. When
it comes to a vote in Congress, will they stand
up and be counted?"
Johnson
said he will continue to support the Second Amendment
and would use his influence with Obama if necessary
to discourage any action that might threaten gun
owners.
"I
have much more potential influence over Obama
than would be the case otherwise," Johnson
said Friday.
But
he also doubts that would be necessary.
"I
don't believe (Obama) would try to do something
that draconian. I don't think Mr. Stonecipher
has much to worry about," Johnson said. "After
all, Obama has said that he will not take away
guns. I take him at his word."
Gun
advocates demand more than words, however. And
Dykstra thinks that appearing on the same side
of the ballot with Obama is likely to prove a
negative for Johnson with gun owners, even with
the NRA endorsement.
"Sen.
Johnson has been a big supporter of Obama,"
Dykstra said. "That can't be good. It's not
going to help him here in South Dakota, on this
issue or a number of others."
This
is Johnson's first NRA endorsement in a U.S. Senate
campaign. He wasn't endorsed by the group as the
challenger against incumbent Republican Sen. Larry
Pressler in 1996. And although he was the incumbent
in 2002, Johnson lost the endorsement to Republican
challenger John Thune.
Herseth
Sandlin received an NRA "A" but not
the endorsement in her unsuccessful run for Congress
against Gov. Bill Janklow in 2002. She again received
an "A" but not the endorsement in her
successful June 2004 special-election campaign
against Republican state Sen. Larry Diedrich.
But later in 2004, in the general election against
Diedrich, and again in her 2006 reelection race
against Republican Bruce Whalen and this year
against Lien, she has since received both the
NRA "A" and an endorsement.
Dennis
said that all helps Herseth Sandlin at the polls,
just as it helps Johnson.
"I'm
sure Herseth Sandlin needs it, also," Dennis
said. "She will probably get re-elected.
The advantage always goes to the incumbent. I
wish I could change that."
Herseth
Sandlin said she takes pride in her NRA ratings
and endorsements and believes the Second Amendment
is important in preserving the South Dakota hunting
tradition and rights of private gun owners.
"As
a defender of our Second Amendment rights, I support
allowing law-abiding citizens to exercise their
right to carry firearms for personal protection,"
she said. "I oppose federal firearm registration
and licensing and attempts to limit gun owners'
rights through bans on types of firearms or ammunition."
Lien
is an NRA member who has met with the group in
Washington, D.C., and received a qualified "A"
because he doesn't have a state legislative or
congressional voting record.
"My
rating is all based on a questionnaire I filled
out. But I'm obviously a strong supporter of the
Second Amendment," he said. "I know
that the incumbents get it (endorsement) if other
things are equal."
Contact
Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com
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