
Image Source: (AP Images/Sipa USA via AP)
After more than a decade of carrying the antigun torch, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) has come to terms with the fact that voters are done toeing the line when it comes to major partisan political issues – including 'gun control'.
Acknowledging the shift, Murphy recently told a crowd, "the fastest-growing share of the electorate are socially and culturally conservative voters who are economically populist."
This awakening is fueling a resurgence of American pride and a collective desire to return to foundational principles, starting with the First and Second Amendments.
But it's not just a political shift, it's a cultural re-centering with a seismic effect so impressive that it has antigun politicians like Sen. Murphy scrambling for level ground.
"I think the future of our republic and the future of our party now depends on us building a big-tent party… and really being purposefully more permissive about who we let in…," the Senator went on to say.
Of course, for Sen. Murphy, there is no room in his big tent for the guns.
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