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Go Home Walmart Could Be the Key to Gun Control

PLANK JANUARY 9, 2013

Walmart Could Be the Key to Gun Control

The Newtown murders may seem like a tipping point that will inevitably spark new gun control. But nothing is inevitable if Republicans still control the House and the National Rifle Association still exists. Recognizing that sheer emotion is not enough to overcome those obstacles, the White House’s emerging strategy, according to the Washington Post, includes this possible gambit: “rallying support from Wal-Mart and other gun retailers for measures that would benefit their businesses.”

Conservative antennae perked up, with cries of “crony capitalism” ricocheting through their echo chamber. The Daily Caller’s Matt Lewis cited my July New York Times op-ed “How Liberals Win,” which detailed the history of corporations facilitating big liberal victories from FDR to LBJ to BHO. Or in Lewis’ interpretation, “liberals tend to win when they co-opt big business.” The Washington Examiner needed no reminding: its headline nervously foreshadowed, “Obama going for gun control with tactic used to pass Obamacare.”

They are right to worry. If Wal-Mart and other major gun sellers partner with the White House, the gun lobby would be divided between manufacturers and retailers, potentially neutralizing the airwaves and preventing the NRA – heavily backed by manufacturers – from positioning itself as the sole voice of gun-owning America.

Would Walmart go for it? It’s plausible. Unlike edgy gun shows that serve niche markets, Walmart needs to maintain an image with broad appeal, beyond those who dream of assembling a militia in their backyard. This is why Walmart previously partnered with Michael Bloomberg’s Mayors Against Illegal Guns to establish security guidelines for hiring, training staff, and conducting sales that goes beyond what’s required by law. It's also why Walmart will participate in Thursday's session of  Vice President Joe Biden's gun control task force, a decision the company made just hours after suffering criticism for saying it had a scheduling conflict. If the choice today is between Barack Obama or Wayne LaPierre, it’s no contest.

Seeing the danger of an Obama/Walmart partnership, conservatives are pushing the “crony capitalist” charge in hopes of rendering such a liberal-corporate alliance ineffective. To pre-emptively counter the push to end the “gun show loophole,” which permits unlicensed dealers to sell guns without background checks, Breitbart.com’s A.W.R. Hawkins writes: “[President Obama] is leveraging Walmart by showing them how they will benefit from supporting his push to cut off other avenues of gun sales. If effect, he's saying support this and more people will have to come to Walmart to get their guns. What he's not telling them is that he has to greatly reduce Americans' freedoms to do it.”

By arguing that closing the loophole is more about corporate profits than the broader public interest, conservatives may not only give Republican House members cover for inaction, but also stoke disgust among the left at the president’s embrace of liberals’ favorite business to boycott.

But is it a fair charge? Could a partnership with gun retailers actually backfire and undermine the argument for gun control? Is working with a special interest incompatible with working on behalf of the public interest?

Obviously not. Take the example of energy policy. Conservatives want more oil drilling. They say it will create jobs and enhance energy security, but of course, it will also make oil companies more money. Liberals want more clean energy. They say it will create jobs and enhance energy security, but of course, it will also make clean energy companies more money. Still, one of those policy directions has to be better for the public interest than the other. The real debate is which direction is better for the economy and the environment.

The question of who profits is only relevant if the goals of the special interest actively conflict with the public interest. If Walmart is poised to make more money because it is better equipped to conduct background checks than gun show sellers, it’s hard to argue the public interest wouldn’t be served.

Yes, the optics of building a liberal-corporate alliance are often terrible. President Obama never held a press conference standing next to the head of The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America bragging about their agreement to shelve ideas designed to cut deeper into drug company profits in order to maintain their backing for ObamaCare. Plenty of liberals still grouse that he didn’t try to shove a public health insurance option down the throats of the private insurance lobby. But there is a reason why ObamaCare passed, and ClintonCare, let alone TrumanCare, did not.

Still, any White House partnership with Walmart will bring friction with progressives. Some will worry that if Obama is partnering with the nation’s biggest gun retailer, it must mean he will prematurely compromise on the breadth of regulation. (The editorial page editor for the New York Times has already lamented that the ideas floated by the White House “don’t go far enough.”) Others may cringe since Walmart is the symbol of everything to hate about the American economy: low wages, union busting, outsourcing. Giving Walmart the chance to cleanse its reputation arguably sets back the effort to demonize the company, smash its business model and force it unionize.

The problem is we live in a world where the NRA is extremely organized, Republicans still control the House and several swing states contain significant numbers of gun owners. Meanwhile, Wal-Mart isn’t unionizing anytime soon and the iron is hot for gun control. Priorities have to be made, and compromises have be accepted, if we are to have action and not grandstanding. If Wal-Mart can help pick the lock of the House, and diminish fears that the government will snatch guns away from responsible owners, other battles must wait.

President Obama long understood that the strongest liberal coalitions include corporations. Conservatives know it too. The remaining question is if rank-and-file liberals will accept it.
 

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11 comments

Please justify with an example(s) the "liberals" and "progressives" complaining about this pregamatic approach, or stop the false equivalency day dreaming. Name names. Cite examples. If you don't have any, save the punditry for those who have already humiliated themselves, like David Brooks and Karl Rove. The Obama coalition is remarkably united, regardless of what it does to further your goal of appealing to the widest audience. Hopefully you will soon discover that the right wingers don't really read; they listen and watch, at least statistically speaking.

- smabry03

January 9, 2013 at 7:42pm

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I am pretty far on the political spectrum, and I pretty much loathe Walmart, but Walmart is a fact of life out here in small-town flyover land, so if partnering with them helps move the ball significantly forward on sensible gun legislation - that's a no brainer.

- IowaBeauty

January 9, 2013 at 8:12pm

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Excellent point, smabry. The mythical liberals who forever eschew pragmatism in favor of ideological purity. They are just like conservatives, right? Only on the left. Fuck all these pundits. They are a plague, even on the occasions when they have a good point to make. They are the real problem in America, not liberals, not conservatives, because they are more interested in an interesting narrative than in reality and will happily ignore reality if it advances their self-interested, theological commitment to narrative purity. What matters is the story, nothing else. See, e.g. Bill Scher.

- roidubouloi

January 9, 2013 at 8:22pm

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Stories like this aren't stories in the traditional journalistic sense, and neither are they really punditry (anecdotal analysis of political trends) or even open advocacy journalism: they are something else -- a kind of provocative (virtual) street-theater that seems to be dependent on the responses and reactions they are calling forth. It's as if Sher is demanding that a few liberals come forth RIGHT THIS MINUTE and act out the script he's conconcted in the article, as if he was managing a circus lion.

- ironyroad

January 9, 2013 at 8:58pm

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I am sure Nancy Pelosi would oblige. There's an ideological purist for you.

- roidubouloi

January 9, 2013 at 9:07pm

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Not only is there no evidence that liberals will dislike involving Walmart, it's likely the opposite will be true: partisans love pitting their enemies against each other, especially in service of their ideological goals. I'm personally thrilled that Walmart's involved.

- polcereal

January 10, 2013 at 12:43pm

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Scher writes: "Obviously not. Take the example of energy policy. Conservatives want more oil drilling. They say it will create jobs and enhance energy security, but of course, it will also make oil companies more money. Liberals want more clean energy. They say it will create jobs and enhance energy security, but of course, it will also make clean energy companies more money. Still, one of those policy directions has to be better for the public interest than the other. The real debate is which direction is better for the economy and the environment." There isn't much debate over which is better for the economy. Cheaper energy is always better. If green energy could work at the scale it needed to work, then conservatives would be all for it. Thus it's not about oil per se. It's about cheap energy. And not just a little cheaper. Fossil is a LOT cheaper than green. The impact on the environment isn't a foregone conclusion. Many things that appear green on the surface are actually very bad for the environment, and much worse than burning fossil fuel. Libs fail horribly at second order analysis, and the first-order analysis is usually clouded by what feels right, and thus flawed too. Scher writes: "But is it a fair charge? Could a partnership with gun retailers actually backfire and undermine the argument for gun control? Is working with a special interest incompatible with working on behalf of the public interest?" The hysteria around guns right now turned 2012 into the biggest year for gun sales ever (20% over 2011). And 2011 was previously the biggest. Gun and bullet sales are through the roof right now. The crazies are stockpiling guns and ammo like never before. The gun makers are making more money than ever. 5 billion bullets were sold in the US in 2011, and likely many more than that in 2012. If you measure gun control success by the number of new guns out there, then the Obama administration has failed catastrophically compared to Bush. Regardless of what legislation comes next. The gun debate is part of the "look over there!" plan to discuss anything other than the fiscal order of things.

- seattleeng

January 10, 2013 at 1:44pm

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"5 billion bullets were sold in the US in 2011, and likely many more than that in 2012..." and more than a billion bullets, HOLLOW POINT BULLETS, have been bought by various agencies of the United States government OTHER THAN the military. Why? Who is Obama planning to waste with these so-called "Cop Killer" bullets?

- dalefogden

January 10, 2013 at 1:52pm

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Maybe they are planning to waste gun owners when they take up arms against the government.

- roidubouloi

January 10, 2013 at 8:27pm

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Best thing that could happen to this country right would be for the Confederate States (the heart and soul of the Republican party) to secede, for the rest of us to show them the door, and for them to create a libertarian paradise that, hopefully, will draw all the wacko libertarians and right-wingnuts to live there instead of in the United States. Then we, the citizens of the United States, can move forward into the next century while the Confederate States of America move backward to the 12th century, or maybe the 10th. Guns, teen pregnancy, methamphetamine, incest, murder, ignorance, illiteracy, creationism -- and all without the much more liberal and productive blue states pumping money into their economies. Quite a toxic stew it would be. We would probably have to build a security wall higher, deeper, and wider than anything Israel ever conceived of. But, oh, what good riddance.

- roidubouloi

January 10, 2013 at 8:32pm

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Oh, did I mention supply-side nuttery?

- roidubouloi

January 10, 2013 at 8:33pm

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