Huckabee Expresses Concerns About Gun Laws

Last updated Friday, September 21, 2007 7:12 PM CDT in News

By Aaron Sadler
THE MORNING NEWS

    WASHINGTON -- Mike Huckabee warned Friday against federal judges who seek to use international law to shape gun-control rulings.

    Huckabee told a friendly crowd at a National Rifle Association meeting that the nation should not tolerate judges who try to strip away the Second Amendment right to bear arms by using international law as precedent.

    He also was sharply critical of the United Nations, an organization that the NRA says supports a global gun ban.

    Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential hopeful, earned a standing ovation from the crowd of about 500 for his stringent opposition to judicial intervention on gun issues.

    He was one of a parade of GOP contenders who spoke at the event.

    Huckabee said he wouldn't mind if U.N. headquarters in New York "were to break off and float in the East River, never to be seen again."

    U.N. officials have repeatedly said that their efforts to restrict the global small-arms trade should not be seen as an attempt to ban guns worldwide.

    After his speech, Huckabee told reporters that he would work with the U.N. as long as the country maintained its sovereignty.

    "It would only be a danger if there were Americans who somehow felt that we had an obligation to yield ourselves to a law other than our own Constitution and the laws we create," he said.

    However, judges recently have cited international law as precedent in some cases and that concerns him, he added.

    "International law doesn't have an application in the appellate process or the adjudication process in an American court," Huckabee said.

    Huckabee, who with his wife Janet is a longtime member of the NRA, said he thought the Second Amendment should be held as sacrosanct as other rights like freedom of the press and of religion.

    There should be no geographic exemptions either, he said, in opposition to gun restrictions in urban areas. The District of Columbia, for instance, bans hand guns.

    He did not directly criticize opponents like Rudy Giuliani, the former New York mayor who once referred to the NRA as "extremists" and earned a tepid reception Friday.

    But Huckabee did say voters should look at the past records of Republican presidential contenders, then he listed his pro-gun accomplishments as governor.

    Huckabee signed into law legislation that prevents liability lawsuits against gun manufacturers and opposed an assault weapons ban. He said he was also the first sitting governor to receive a permit to carry a concealed handgun.

    "I've told some hostile crowds, 'Be careful, don't mess with me,'" Huckabee said.

    Reader Comments (4 comment(s))


    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsibility of their authors. The Morning News does not review comments before their publication, nor do we guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by our comment policy. If you see a comment that violates our policy, please notify the web editor.

    UAfootball wrote on Sep 24, 2007 9:36 AM:

    " Just when I think Huckabee might be an ok guy, he goes and makes a statement like that! What's he going to do to the hostile crowds? Shoot them for not liking him? Isn't that the major problems with guns? Angry people firing at will when they don't like what someone has said or done? "

    Jumbojet wrote on Sep 25, 2007 1:25 PM:

    " He is an OK guy. He believes in protecting the Constitutional rights of ALL Americans. You can't legislate Common Sense. Those 'Angry people' that use guns to settle disputes lack that Common Sense. We, with Common Sense, deserve to have our rights protected - even if we have to protect them with a gun. Otherwise, we would all be sheep at the mercy of the wolves. "

    Jumbojet wrote on Sep 25, 2007 1:28 PM:

    " ...and it never is a "problem with guns". It is a problem with PEOPLE. Guns are inanimate objects - just like your automobile. Drink a lot of alcohol, get behind the wheel and kill someone. Where was the problem? Surely not the automobile or the alcohol - just the idiot that consumed the alcohol and then chose to drive! "

    gary wrote on Sep 25, 2007 6:02 PM:

    " UAFootball, don't you know a "satire" comment when you read one? I liked the statement about the U.N. "breaking off and disappearing." "


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