Connect with us

Regional News

Warner, Kaine Condemn GOP Tax Bill Over Gun Silencer Rollback

Published

on

Virginia’s Democratic U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, D-Va., are slamming the Republican spending plan moving through Congress, warning that tucked among its billion-dollar tax cuts for the wealthy is a dangerous gift to the gun industry that rolls back long-standing safety rules for firearm silencers.

In a blistering joint statement Thursday, the senators said the proposal would weaken gun laws that have been in place since 1934 by eliminating registration and ownership requirements for silencers, also known as suppressors — devices that muffle the sound of gunfire and make it harder for law enforcement to respond to active shooter situations.

“The Republican tax plan being pushed through Congress not only cuts critical services Virginians rely on in order to give huge tax breaks to billionaires,” Warner and Kaine said, “but it also makes our communities less safe by weakening gun safety measures on silencers.”

Though the change occupies just 12 lines in the nearly 400-page bill, the senators say its implications are severe.

If passed, the bill would repeal the $200 tax on silencer purchases, wipe out federal registration requirements for the devices and deliver millions in savings to gun manufacturers. The suppressor tax, part of the National Firearms Act of 1934, has been a core part of federal gun law for nearly a century.

The two lawmakers pointed to the 2019 Virginia Beach mass shooting — where a gunman used a silencer to kill 12 people — as a grim example of what can happen when these devices are used.

“Part of the reason that these registration and ownership requirements exist is because silencers, like the one that was used in the Virginia Beach mass shooting, make it harder for law enforcement to locate and respond to an active shooter,” they said.

Silencers are designed to reduce the sound, flash and recoil of a firearm, but their public safety risks have made them a focal point of debate. Law enforcement groups have long supported keeping suppressors regulated, arguing that they undermine gunshot detection technology and make it far more difficult to locate shooters in an emergency.

According to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, 4.5 million suppressors were registered with the federal government by the end of 2024, including 113,046 in Virginia. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates repealing the tax would cost the federal government $1.4 billion over ten years.

But for gun rights groups, even this deregulation isn’t enough.

The American Firearms Association called the move “nothing more than a crumb dropped from the King’s table,” and its Vice President Patrick Parsons said Republicans should go further by eliminating regulations on short-barrel rifles, abolishing the ATF and repealing the National Firearms Act altogether.

Warner and Kaine argue the silencer provision is just one piece of a broader bill they say would do massive harm to working families while lavishing the ultra-rich.

They warn that the legislation would strip health insurance from more than 262,000 Virginians, cut food assistance to over 204,000 people, raise energy costs across the state, and threaten more than 20,000 Virginia jobs.

They also noted the bill would eliminate a program that allows Americans to file taxes for free, raise taxes on minimum-wage workers, and blow a $3.8 trillion hole in the federal deficit — all while handing the top 0.1% of earners an average tax cut of $188,000.

“Americans deserve to feel safe in their communities,” the senators said, vowing to push back against “this disastrous bill” when it reaches the Senate floor.

 

by Markus Schmidt, Virginia Mercury


Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Samantha Willis for questions: info@virginiamercury.com.

Front Royal, VA
61°
Sunny
7:25 am7:18 pm EDT
Feels like: 61°F
Wind: 7mph NNW
Humidity: 17%
Pressure: 30.19"Hg
UV index: 0
SunMonTue
59°F / 54°F
68°F / 28°F
37°F / 23°F
Obituaries3 hours ago

Stephen Paul Sill (1955 – 2026)

State News6 hours ago

Virginia Seeks Public Input for 2026 Statewide Rail Plan

Business Spotlight8 hours ago

Front Royal Craftsmen Revive Centuries-Old Timber Framing Tradition

Local News8 hours ago

Local NewsVDOT: Warren County Traffic Alert for March 16 – 20, 2026

Legislative Update9 hours ago

Virginia Lawmakers End Session Without Final Budget

Interesting Things to Know10 hours ago

Your Personal Mission Statement: A Guide to Getting What You Want Out of Life

Historically Speaking11 hours ago

Disappointed In Our Olympic Spirit

Interesting Things to Know11 hours ago

How St. Patrick’s Day Became America’s Biggest Irish Party

State News1 day ago

Virginia State Police Urge Sober Plans for Saint Patrick’s Day Celebrations

Opinion1 day ago

In a One-Party County, Internal Party Decisions Affect Us All  

State News1 day ago

Virginia State Police Seize Nearly 100 Pounds of Narcotics, Recover Firearms in Weekly Crime Suppression Effort

Obituaries1 day ago

Barton Charles “Bart” Haller (1940 – 2026)

Obituaries1 day ago

Dawn Lee Dodson (1970 – 2026)

Obituaries1 day ago

Mary Helen “Nanny” Spires Johnt (1954 – 2026)

State News1 day ago

Another Round of ‘Momnibus’ Bills Are Headed Towards the Governor This Year

State News1 day ago

Virginia Joins States Challenging Trump Admin Regulations That Limit Free Birth Control Access

Obituaries1 day ago

Update: Charlotte Swanson Smith (1951 – 2025)

Opinion1 day ago

Why We are Challenging the Republican Mass Meeting

Obituaries1 day ago

Bruce Norman Showman (1954 – 2026)

EDA in Focus1 day ago

EDA Relaunches Small Business Loan Program to Help Warren County Entrepreneurs Access Capital

Interesting Things to Know1 day ago

Targeted Exercises to Improve Your Putting

Real Estate1 day ago

The Hidden Risks of House Hunting Solely Online

Interesting Things to Know1 day ago

Choosing the Right Cleaner for Every Surface in Your Home

Local Government2 days ago

New Church Among Consent Items at County Planning Commission Meeting

Local News2 days ago

Warren County GOP Mass Meeting Results Challenged After Allegations of Voting Irregularities