I stole this from AKnet. I personally am glad to see the NRA asking questions about the sunset.
tony
http://www.nraila.org/NewsCenter.asp?FormMode=Detail&ID=1566
Linked article: http://www.gomemphis.com/mca/midsouth_news/article/0,1426,MCA_1497_1097238,00.html
WASHINGTON - The National Rifle Association is pressing candidates for federal office to once again allow Americans to buy assault-style, semiautomatic weapons with high-capacity magazines.
Tennessee's three main Senate candidates say they agree with the proposal, but the leading gun control organization said the move would make it easier for terrorists to obtain semiautomatic arms.
At the urging of the Clinton administration, Congress in 1994 banned the sale of 19 types of assault weapons and magazines with more than 10 rounds. But the ban was for only 10 years.
The NRA's 2002 questionnaire asks candidates whether they agree or disagree with the NRA "that the gun and magazine ban should be allowed to sunset in 2004."
Republican Senate hopeful Lamar Alexander said Thursday he's still filling out the questionnaire but that he will support ending the ban.
"My record has been pretty consistent for 25 years in support of Second Amendment rights. I favor restrictions on fully automatic weapons, but I don't support bans," said Alexander.
U.S. Rep. Ed Bryant (R-Tenn.), another Senate hopeful, co-sponsored a bill to repeal the ban when he arrived in Congress in 1995.
In this year's campaign he has accused Alexander of supporting the ban when he ran for president. He cited a quote, supposedly taken from Alexander's 1999 campaign Web site, saying Alexander supported the assault weapons ban.
But Alexander said that's wrong.
In a March 1995 press conference, Alexander said he supported repealing the 1994 law. "The federal law won't do any good at all," Alexander said then.
U.S. Rep. Bob Clement (D-Tenn.), the other major Senate candidate, voted against the ban in 1994, but then voted in favor of the underlying crime bill. He joined Bryant in voting for the repeal in 1995.
"Our Constitution gives all Americans the right to bear arms. The ban on assault weapons is set to expire in late 2004, and I support that expiration," Clement said Thursday.
Michael Barnes, president of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said it would be "insane" to let the 1994 law lapse with the country facing the threat of terrorism.
The center recently issued a report on how weak U.S. gun laws could be used by terrorists to obtain weapons.
It noted that one manual found at a terrorist training facility in Afghanistan - titled "How Can I train Myself for Jihad" - contained a section advising al-Qaida members about how to amass firearms in the United States.
One man, Ali Boumelhem, was convicted last year on charges that he and his brother purchased shotguns, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and assault weapons parts from Michigan gun shows for shipment to the Hezbollah in Lebanon.
But Alexander said, "I think terrorists are able to get weapons just like criminals are able to get weapons in the District of Columbia." Handgun sales are illegal in the district.
Contact Washington Correspondent James W. Brosnan at (202) 408-2701.