The Minnesota House passed two major gun control bills Thursday night, both priorities for state Democrats that still have no clear path to advancing out of the Republican-controlled Senate.
Democrats and gun control advocates have spent years pushing for a bill to expand criminal background checks to cover most private firearms transfers, as well as for a second bill enacting a "red flag" law to let courts temporarily remove guns from people deemed a threat to themselves or others. The first bill passed the House 69-62, the second 68-62.
House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, described the bills as a response to an "urgent crisis" most recently marked by Wednesday's deadly gun rampage at a Molson Coors plant in Milwaukee.
"We've almost become immune to these kinds of news stories," Hortman said. "And we know that the laws that we proposed enacting here in Minnesota have been enacted in Republican-led states with Republican governors, Republican Houses, Republican Senates, and we know that they have saved lives in those states."
Backers of the gun control bills rallied outside the House chamber before the vote and later read the names of gun violence victims. Inside the chamber, a throng of gun rights activists looked on from the gallery.
Both bills advanced out of the DFL-led House as part of a public safety package last session but were defeated on a party-line vote in subsequent budget negotiations. Passing the bills separately this year forces lawmakers to take direct votes that could be used by both sides in the fall campaigns.
"I think the voters spoke in 2018," said Ruth Richardson, a Mendota Heights Democrat in her first term who sponsored the red flag bill. "If we're not able to move these [bills] forward, I believe that voters are going to speak again."
Rep. Marion O'Neill, R-Maple Lake, countered that greater Minnesota constituents will show up to the polls "not in the way that [Democrats] think" in order to preserve Second Amendment rights.