Nevada Governor Vetoes 3 Gun Bills Backed By Democratic-Led Legislature

Republican Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo vetoed a trio of gun control bills Wednesday.
The Democratic-led legislature passed Assembly Bill 354, Assembly Bill 355, and Senate Bill 171 on party-line votes, according to the Nevada legislature’s website.
“I will not support legislation that infringes on the constitutional rights of Nevadans,” Lombardo said in a statement. “As I stated in my letters, much of the legislation I vetoed today is in direct conflict with legal precedent and established constitutional protections. Therefore, I cannot support them.”
Today, I vetoed SB 171, AB 354, and AB 355.
I will not support legislation that infringes on the constitutional rights of Nevadans. pic.twitter.com/acoJ8NVI7r
— Governor Joe Lombardo (@JosephMLombardo) May 17, 2023
AB 354 would have prohibited guns within 100 feet of an “election site,” which include polling, ballot box and drop-off, and central counting locations. It also updates the definition of “firearms importer or manufacturer.”
AB 355 would have barred individuals under 21 from handling and possessing semiautomatic shotguns or semiautomatic centerfire rifles, and SB 171 would have forbidden anyone “committing or attempting to commit a crime motivated by certain characteristics of the victim” from possessing firearms for 10 years.
In letters to Speaker of the Nevada State Assembly Steve Yeager and Majority Leader of the Nevada State Senate Nicole Cannizzaro, Lombardo provided reasons for vetoing the gun control legislation. He noted that the measures were “too broad,” would be unlikely to “pass constitutional muster,” and put a “defendant’s Second Amendment rights in jeopardy.”
The Democrats do not have the votes to override the veto, unless at least one Republican lawmaker votes with them, according to a local CBS outlet.
Assemblywoman Sandra Jauregui, who sponsored two of the bills, issued a statement referencing the October 2017 Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting.