Tester to Senate Colleagues: Protect Veterans’ Second Amendment Rights from Federal Overreach in Government Funding Bill
Tester calls on Senate leadership to keep bipartisan amendment that protects veterans’ access to legal firearms; Senator: “We need to ensure the government does not infringe on veterans’ Second Amendment rights and that they are afforded due process protections.”
(U.S. Senate) – Continuing his efforts to protect Montanans’ Second Amendment rights, U.S. Senator Jon Tester is urging Senate leadership to include a critical bipartisan amendment he championed to protect veterans’ access to legal firearms as the Senate considers legislation to fund the government.
In his letter, Tester called on his colleagues, the heads of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee that oversees funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), to retain the amendment language as-passed in October to protect veterans’ Second Amendment Rights.
“I am writing to urge you to retain in conference a provision that would protect veterans’ access to legal firearms,” Tester wrote to the senior Senate appropriators tasked with funding VA. “It is not right that a DC bureaucrat at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) could take away a veteran’s legal right to firearms simply because they needed assistance managing their finances.”
Tester highlighted Senate Amendment 1354, which was successfully included as an amendment to the Senate Military Construction, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations bill in October. The provision would prohibit federal funds from being used to report a veteran’s information to the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) without an order from a judge finding that the individual is a danger to themselves or others. Reporting a veteran’s information to the DOJ for use by NICS would prohibit them from passing a background check to purchase a firearm.
Tester underscored how veterans have testified that VA’s current bureaucratic practice drives them away from accessing the mental health care and services they need at the Department: “Veterans have made it clear that VA’s current practice is pushing some veterans away from the mental health care they need. The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) have previously testified that veterans often refuse to seek mental health care at VA out of fear their firearms will be unjustly taken away. The fact is - as VFW testified - this practice is adding to the stigma around veterans receiving mental health care, and creates a barrier to care for many and it has to change.”
The Senator concluded, “Veterans who have honorably served our country should not have their Second Amendment right taken away by federal bureaucrats without their day in court. We need to ensure the government does not infringe on veterans’ Second Amendment rights and that they are afforded due process protections. I urge you to retain this language in conference to protect veterans’ access to legal firearms and remove a barrier to veterans accessing mental health care at VA.”
The amendment as drafted in October is supported by Veterans Service Organizations and Montana veterans’ mental health professionals.
“The VA's long-standing policy to threaten veterans Constitutional rights who ask for help managing their affairs has been a barrier to veterans receiving help for years,” said National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Montana Director Matt Kuntz. “It's time to end it, so veterans can reach out for the financial help they need without having to worry about unintended consequences.”
The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) testified at a hearing in 2022: “A negative consequence of VA’s current practice is that veterans tell the VFW that they refuse to seek mental health care at VA because they fear their firearms will be taken away. This has created a significant stigma surrounding mental health and has created a barrier to care for many. This perception is difficult to change.”
“On behalf of the 1.6 million members of The American Legion, I am pleased to express support for amendment #1201 to the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act,” said The American Legion National Commander Daniel J. Seehafer. “Each veteran, regardless of disability, should maintain the right to possess a firearm unless deemed unfit to possess weapons by a judicial authority with the full benefit of due process. Any constitutional right should be protected with this same expectation of careful scrutiny, to ensure that no right is removed without due process.”
“For too long, veterans have been denied their constitutional right to gun ownership when they’ve been appointed a fiduciary by the VA, being added to the NICS database without any due process,” said Mission Roll Call’s Executive Director Cole Lyle. “Mission Roll Call thanks the members of Congress who have finally corrected this injustice - particularly the leadership of both the House and Senate Veterans Affairs Committees. Veterans and their families are now assured that only a proper judicial authority will be able to determine who is referred to the NICS database. Our veterans swore to protect and defend the Constitution and they deserve equal treatment under the law.”
Read the Senator’s full letter HERE.