By Noah Rothman
Thursday, September 25, 2025
As the news broke yesterday of a third ambush-style
attack on an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in as many months,
Democrats, including those who have spent months describing ICE as an extralegal
“secret police force,” blamed the violence on the ubiquity
of guns in America.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer was among them. “I don’t know what’s happened here and I don’t know
about the guns, but we need better laws on guns,” he improvised in a Wednesday
appearance on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. “I mean, we got something done a few
years ago, but it’s just rampant. And we have to do more.” Indeed, “It’s become
almost every day one of these things happen.”
This is a mantra — a catechism to which Democrats appeal
when acts of obvious political violence cannot plausibly be attributed to the
right. We know that to be the case because when acts of political violence can
be linked to right, Democrats and their allies in the media do not hesitate to spell out the truth as they see it. The obfuscation to
which Schumer appealed is, however, an instrument of political utility that may no longer be as
effective as it once was.
It’s just one poll, so take it with a grain of salt. But
if the Democratic Party has lost its edge on the issue of guns and gun
violence, that would represent a political sea change.
In the last decade, voters could generally be counted on
to tell pollsters that they supported new restrictions on gun ownership to curb
violence and gun crime. Even if their voting patterns did not reflect their preferences as
reflected in public opinion surveys, the public was still willing to express
support for what they thought was the right opinion on guns. If the
polling has caught up with the preferences that are revealed through electoral
outcomes, that should affect Democrats’ thinking on this issue.
But it would be charitable to accuse Senator Schumer of
thinking in this case. His was an instinctual reaction, an effort to escape
from a political trap. It just seems like it’s not going to play out as
Democratic partisans might expect it would.
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