House Committee to hear slate of gun-related bills, citizens to testify on taxpayer funded lobbying

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square

The House Committee on Homeland Security and Public Safety on Thursday is slated to hear several bills that would allow U.S. citizens living in Texas to carry firearms without permits.

Gov. Greg Abbott has pledged to make Texas a Second Amendment sanctuary state this year after previous attempts to pass pro-Second Amendment bills in the legislature failed under former House Speaker Dennis Bonnen.

Bills proposed include HB 1238 filed by state Rep. Kyle Biedermann, HB 1911 filed by state Rep. James White, who chairs the committee, and HB 2900 filed by state Rep. Cole Hefner.

The Republican Party of Texas has prioritized constitutional carry for over a decade and has criticized Republican leaders in the legislature for not implementing it, especially since all three branches of state government are controlled by Republicans.

In 2019, a constitutional carry bill was squashed by Bonnen, who sent the measure to a committee led by a Democrat. Rep. Poncho Nevarez, D-Eagle Pass, never allowed the bill to have a hearing. Bonnen referred to supporters of the bill as “fringe gun activists.”

A constitutional carry bill was never filed in the Texas Senate in 2019, a chamber led by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, a Republican.

For the past several sessions, constitutional carry bills were filed and championed by Rep. Jonathan Stickland, R–Bedford, and Rep. James White, R–Hillister. With Stickland announcing last year that he would not be seeking reelection, Biedermann, R–Fredericksburg, pledged to file a constitutional carry bill.

“Our Constitution was written to ensure certain rights of all citizens,” Biedermann said. “Everyone has the right to life and to protect that life from harm. No one should have to pay a fee or get permission from the government before being able to do so legally.”

Rachel Malone, Texas director of Gun Owners of America, has highlighted which bills Texans supporting gun rights should support and oppose.

Democrats have filed bills to put in place processes to confiscate guns, repeal stand-your-ground laws, ban certain magazines, implement universal background checks and ban open carry of rifles and shotguns.

Also on Thursday, Texans will have the opportunity to speak at a House State Affairs Committee hearing on a bill that would ban taxpayer-funded lobbying.

“Up to $41 million per year has been spent on taxpayer-funded lobbying, even though 91 percent of all Texans oppose the practice. It’s time to defund this bureaucracy,” Rep. Mayes Middleton, R-Wallisville, who filed HB 749, said.

A companion bill in the state Senate, SB 234, filed by Sen. Bob Hall, R–Edgewood, was referred to the State Affairs Committee on March 3 but has not yet been scheduled for a hearing. Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, also filed a similar bill, SB 10.

Since 2013, Abbott has said the practice of taxpayer-funded lobbying “must stop” but has never made it a legislative priority.

In his 2021 State of the State address, he left out the issue and has still not listed it as a legislative priority.

Last session, a bill that would have banned the practice passed in the Senate but not in the House.

According to a 2019 Texas Public Policy Foundation poll, 88% of Texans oppose taxpayer-funded lobbying. In the March 2020 primary election, nearly 95 percent of Republican primary voters said they supported a proposition that would ban the practice statewide.

“Government – especially local governments in Texas – has no business handing millions of taxpayer dollars over to lobbyists,” Chuck DeVore, vice president of national initiatives at TPPF, said. “Those are critical funds that should be used for education, public safety, property tax relief, or other priorities that benefit taxpayers directly. It is time to end taxpayer-funded lobbying in Texas to ensure taxpayers are not footing the bill for special interests in Austin.”

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