Montana House Passes Bill with Constitutional Carry
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Montana House Passes Bill with Constitutional Carry, Removal of Gun Free ZonesU.S.A. –-(AmmoLand.com)- The Montana House of Representatives has passed major gun law legislation, HB102, by more than a 2-1 margin, 66 for, 31 against. The bill is the accumulation of a decade and a half of struggle against Democrat Governors, who have repeatedly vetoed reform legislation passed with large majorities in the legislature. Numerous sections in the bill show the Montana legislature has learned the lesson from other states as they restore the right to keep and bear arms. Link to the text of Montana bill HB102 at mt.gov. HB102 is a general revision of Montana gun law. Numerous Montana statutes are revised, and new sections are added.Here are the major points of HB102: Purpose and Legislative intent from the bill: NEW SECTION. Section 1. Purpose. The purpose of [sections 1 through11] is to enhance the safety of people by expanding their legal ability to provide for their own defense by reducing or eliminating government-mandated places where only criminals are armed and where citizens are prevented from exercising their fundamental right to defend themselves and others. NEW SECTION. Section 2. Legislative intent. It is the intent of the legislature to reduce or remove provisions of law that limit or prohibit the ability of citizens to defend themselves by restricting with prior restraint the right to keep or bear arms that the people have reserved to themselves in the Montana constitution, and to further establish that the right to defense of a person’s life, liberty, or property is a fundamental right. Section 3. Legislative Findings:
- The Montana Constitution does not grant the Montana University system the power to amend, suspend, alter or abolish Constitutional rights.
- The Montana University land and buildings are public property and are not private entities.
- Prohibition of possession of firearms on campus calls into question the right to keep and bear arms protected by the Montana Constitution.
- Gun-free zones provide an increased risk to the health and safety of citizens.
- The U.S. Supreme Court, in the Heller and McDonald decisions, affirmed the right to keep and bear arms. The rights apply against local and state governments.