PHOTO BY TOM DEF / UNSPLASH

Theย Tennessee Firearms Association (TFA) is trashing Gov. Bill Leeโ€™s push for what it calls a โ€œred flag law,โ€ saying he wants to pass an unconstitutional measure as an emotional reaction to the Covenant School shooting.

โ€œGovernor Lee called for the Legislature to react to the emotional response of some citizens after the Covenant murders and more particularly after the expulsion of two Democrat House members who demanded gun control,โ€ TFA Executive Director John Harris said in a Wednesday statement. โ€œNothing in Bruen authorized knee-jerk emotional responses to murders or the calls of progressive Democrats and their mobs to justify government infringement of a right protected by the Constitution.โ€

The association contends Leeโ€™s plan would violate the U.S. Supreme Courtโ€™s decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. Justices found that the Second and Fourteenth Amendments guarantee the right to โ€œkeepโ€ firearms in their homes and to โ€œbear armsโ€ in public, including the ability of โ€œordinary, law-abiding citizensโ€ to carry firearms โ€œfor self-defense outside the home,โ€ without infringement from state and federal governments.

Iโ€™ve talked to Republican members that say that the Tennessee Firearms Association is irrelevant.

โ€“ Rep. Bob Freeman, D-Nashville

Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti, based in part on the courtโ€™s decision in Bruen, reached an agreement with a California gun rights group that sued the state over its permit-less carry law and agreed to drop the gun-carry age to 18. Two bills to lower the age to 18 are hung up in committees, but the state Legislature remains a gun-friendly body overall.

Thus, Lee is avoiding the term โ€œred flag lawโ€ while trying to garner the Legislatureโ€™s support for a new protective order that would prohibit access to weapons for people deemed to be a danger to themselves and others. He made the proposal two weeks after six people, including three 9-year-olds, died in a hail of bullets at The Covenant School in Green Hills.

The proposal, which the governor wants done this session, is meeting with mixed reaction from lawmakers and faces an uphill battle with only a couple of weeks left in the legislative session.

He also signed an executive order Tuesday to improve the background check system in Tennessee for firearms purchases.

Democratic state Rep. Bob Freeman, whose district contains The Covenant School, said Wednesday he hopes the governorโ€™s plan can survive a fight from the gun lobby.

โ€œIโ€™ve talked to Republican members that say that the Tennessee Firearms Association is irrelevant,โ€ Freeman said.

Yet the Republican House will be torn between following the governorโ€™s lead and sticking up for their voters, many of whom base ballot decisions on support on the absolute right to bear arms. The gun lobby doesnโ€™t spend heavily on legislative races, but pro-gun voters are a critical ingredient in Republican elections.

โ€œPeople back home donโ€™t like it. They donโ€™t want their gun rights taken away from โ€™em, so weโ€™re going to have to vet that very, very closely and I donโ€™t know to what degree his executive order will play out on legislation when we go to pass something, because my people back home do not like it,โ€ Rep. Dale Carr, a Sevierville Republican, said Tuesday.

Rank-and-file Republicans are dead set against a โ€œred flag lawโ€ too, Carr said. Senate Majority Leader Jack Johnson, R-Franklin, said, โ€œDepriving someone of a constitutional right is a serious matter and any proposal to create an emergency mental health order of protection must be carefully considered, narrowly tailored and require rigorous due process.โ€

In his statement, Harris points out many Republican lawmakers campaigned as โ€œstrong Second Amendment supportersโ€ and told constituents they would never back a โ€œred flag law,โ€ even signing pledges against voting for such laws.

โ€œNow Republican Governor Lee calls on them to violate those promises and assurances and to pass a โ€˜Red Flagโ€™ law,โ€ Harris wrote.

Harris calls โ€œred flagโ€ laws โ€œa schemeโ€ that allows almost anyone to claim that a person at risk of harming themselves or others shouldnโ€™t be able to possess a gun. He points out courts can direct law enforcement to seize a personโ€™s weapons and to notify authorities that  the person is banned from having guns โ€” all without due process.

Republican leaders said Tuesday any type of protective order to prevent an unstable person from possessing weapons would have to include provisions guaranteeing due process. 

But while some Republican leaders said they would be willing to work with the governor, Johnson, who usually carries the governorโ€™s legislation, said changes to state law shouldnโ€™t be made hastily in an emotional time.

โ€œDepriving someone of a constitutional right is a serious matter and any proposal to create an emergency mental health order of protection must be carefully considered, narrowly tailored and require rigorous due process,โ€ he said. He noted no bill has been drafted and he could not endorse or oppose a bill he hasnโ€™t seen.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and Twitter.