Bi-Partisan House Coalition Votes to Nullify Pistol Brace Ban

DDM4V7 Pistol
IMG Jim Grant

There isn’t much Republicans and Democrats in Congress agree on these days, but a Joint Resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives to disapprove the Biden Administration’s pistol brace rule passed out of the House Tuesday with bipartisan support. The measure received the backing of 217 Republicans and 2 Democrats, Reps. Jared F. Golden of Maine and Mary Sattler Peltola of Alaska. House Joint Resolution 44, as it is captioned, now moves to the Senate for consideration.

The legislation was sponsored by Reps. Andrew Clyde (R-GA) and Richard Hudson (R-NC), and shepherded to the House floor for a vote by Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA). Rep. Hudson spoke on the House Floor and explained the genesis of the pistol brace as an aid to combat-wounded veterans who wanted to be able to safely and accurately operate large-format pistols. He noted the rule reclassifies most braced pistols as “short-barreled rifles” subject to the requirements of the National Firearms Act (NFA). This, he explained, changed longstanding determinations to the contrary, creating legal traps for those who obtained braced pistols in good faith. It is particularly onerous for U.S. servicepeople stationed abroad, Hudson noted, some of whom were unable to avail themselves of the ATF’s “amnesty” period to register pistols subject to the rule.

That amnesty period expired June 1, meaning those who did not register or surrender their affected pistols or take other corrective action became subject to felony penalties under the NFA. Estimates of the number of affected devices vary, from a low of 3 million to as many as 40 million. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives reported that it had received a mere 255,162 registration applications as of the June 1 deadline.

Multiple court challenges are pending to the rule, with limited injunctions against enforcement of the rule having been issued so far in three of them. The NRA is focusing its own litigation efforts on cases filed in the District of North Dakota and the Northern District of Texas. Requests for preliminary injunctions remain pending in those cases.

The Biden Administration, unsurprisingly, has announced it “strongly opposes” H.J. Res. 44, falsely claiming braced pistols are “particularly lethal.” In fact, there is no evidence that braced pistols are more often used in violent crime than other types of handguns. The truth, in fact, is exactly the opposite. ATF’s final rule essentially acknowledges as much, quoting a court case for the proposition that “[a]n agency need not suffer the flood before building the levee.” Nevertheless, Biden pledged to veto the measure if it reached his desk.

The House vote, however, shows there is recognition of the rule’s overreach and fundamental unfairness on both sides of the aisle. It may be that Biden will encounter more resistance from his own party and Democrat voters than he expects to ATF’s attempt to potentially reclassify millions of honest, peaceable Americans as felons for possessing firearms that were considered lawfully acquired at the time of their purchase.

The NRA thanks the hundreds of U.S. Representatives that voted for H.J. Res. 44 for their leadership in protecting the rights of millions of law-abiding persons caught in ATF’s dragnet against braced pistols.

NRA members and gun-rights supporters across the country are urged to contact their U.S. Senators and request that they vote “YES” on the Joint Resolution to block the pistol brace rule and underscore ATF’s overreach.


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)

10 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
buzzsaw

So we have up to 40,000,000 braced AR pistols. Elsewhere, I have read that there are about 20,000,000 MSRs. I assume that the majority of AR platform firearms are rifles, not pistols. I have always believed that the 20,000,000 estimate for rifles is low and this lends credence to that idea. I’m guessing that the number of AR rifles is closer to 60,000,000. This is a good thing and doesn’t even consider the AK and other platforms. Of course, the NFA must go, making all this moot. May the numbers and types of arms in the hands of We the… Read more »

Laddyboy

Tis a SHAME upon this current COMMUNISTIC WANNABE DICTATORS who are FORCING OUR VOTED in Representatives to pass a “BILL” to support a CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT which OUR AMERICAN CONSTITUTION ACKNOWLEDGES EXISTED BEFORE OUR CONSTITUTION WAS SET TO PEN!!!!!!!
“You cannot fix STUPID, however, YOU CAN VOTE THEM OUT!” -Representative John Kennedy — still breathing.

Roland T. Gunner

How about we veto that corrupt, senile old jackass who cheated his way into our White House?

TGP389

To be honest, I was shocked that the AFT ever signed off on pistol braces. I’ve always considered the NFA an unconstitutional law, particularly as it regards sbrs and sb shotguns, but since it was law, and the AFT made cases on it, the permission slips for braces was a real surprise.

The bottom line is that the NFA needs to be repealed.

Last edited 2 years ago by TGP389
California Uber Alles

When you paint a picture of a sad vet, the virtue signaling begins at high volume, while the PMF ruling gets crickets. I mean, the brace rule could be ADA fodder, while the PMF ruling merely slips that “small government” into your home to ensure you don’t have any guns they don’t know about. Essentially, the PMF ruling defangs the populace by ensuring the government always knows who has what guns and can send a large enough force to any doorstep they choose. Otherwise, it would be flipped, and the power would have to be assumed to reside with the… Read more »

Chuck

While I applaud their efforts, Biden will Veto the Resolution, and there’s not enough votes in either chamber to override his Veto, so it’s back to litigating the Ban in the courts.