Amid a heated moment in the 2008 Democratic primary, in a debate against then-Illinois senator Barack Obama that April, Clinton argued that “having any kind of blanket rules” set by the federal government on guns “doesn’t make sense.”
Clinton made the comments in response to a question from moderator Charlie Gibson regarding whether she favors the licensing and registration of handguns.
“What I favor is what works in New York,” she said. “You know, we have a set of rules in New York City and we have a totally different set of rules in the rest of the state.
What might work in New York City is certainly not going to work in Montana. So, for the federal government to be having any kind of, you know, blanket rules that they’re going to try to impose, I think doesn’t make sense.”
In the 2008 debate, George Stephanopoulos challenged Clinton’s answer, alluding to her support for a national gun registry during her 2000 run for Senate in New York.
“I was for the New York rules, that’s right,” Clinton said. “I was for the New York rules because they have worked over time. And there isn’t a lot of uproar in New York about changing them, because I go to upstate New York, where we have a lot of hunters and people who are collectors and people who are sport shooters; they have every reason to believe that their rights are being respected.”
Stephanopoulos had previously asked Clinton her view of the ban on handguns in Washington, D.C., which has since been struck down.
“I want to give local communities the opportunity to have some authority over determining how to keep their citizens safe,” Clinton answered, before further saying she supported “sensible regulation that is consistent with the constitutional right to own and bear arms.”
She suggested that “a total ban” “might be found by the court not to be” constitutional, but admitted, “I don’t know the facts.”
“I don’t think that should blow open a hole that says that D.C. or Philadelphia or anybody else cannot come up with sensible regulations to protect their people and keep, you know, machine guns and assault weapons out of the hands of folks who shouldn’t have them,” she added.
The debate happened less than a week after Clinton attacked her rival Obama’s
remark that people in “small towns in Pennsylvania” “get bitter” and then “cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren’t like them.”
Clinton responded by
saying that “Obama’s remarks are elitist, and they are out of touch.” She also touted her own sharpshooting credentials,
saying that her father “took me out behind the cottage that my grandfather built on a little lake called Lake Winola outside of Scranton and taught me how to shoot when I was a little girl.”
Adding that guns were “part of culture,” she said, “People enjoy hunting and shooting because it’s an important part of who they are. Not because they are bitter.”
...Earlier during her first campaign for president,
in October 2007, Clinton said
“I support the Second Amendment,” adding that “law-abiding citizens should be able to own guns,” but arguing that she also believed “strongly in smart laws that keep guns out of the hands of criminals and terrorists.”
...