Louisiana will likely become the twenty-eighth state to restore Constitutional Carry (permitless carry). South Carolina is in the process of rectifying versions of a (permitless) Constitutional Carry bill in a conference committee. There is a good chance South Carolina will pass a bill acceptable to both the South Carolina House and Senate.
Louisiana already passed a Constitutional Carry bill in 2021. The bill passed with veto-proof majorities, but Governor Bel Edwards (D) was able to sustain a veto with a combination of arm-twisting and promises.
In 2023, Louisiana voters elected Governor Jeff Landry (R). Governor Landry has promised to sign a Constitutional Carry (permitless) bill if it reaches his desk. Support for Senate Bill 1 (SB1) is high. It was passed in the Senate 28 to 10 on February 22, with all Republicans voting for the bill. It was sent to the House Committee on Administrative Justice on February 23. The bill is expected to be passed by the Louisiana House. Republicans hold a supermajority in the House with 73 Republicans and 32 Democrats. All seats were up for election in 2023. The Republicans gained two seats by filling an empty seat and replacing one Democrat.
Here is the most important part of the bill. From Louisiana SB1, §95. Illegal carrying of weapons:
M. The provisions of Paragraph (A)(1) of this Section shall not apply to a resident of Louisiana any person who is if all of the following conditions are met:
(1) The person is twenty-one eighteen years of age or older. and
(2) The person is not prohibited from possessing a firearm under R.S.14:95.1, R.S. 40:1379.3(C)(5) through (17), 18 U.S.C. 922(g), or any other state or federal law.
(3)(a) The person is a reserve or active-duty member of any branch of the
Coding: Words which are struck through are deletions from existing law; words in boldface type and underscored are additions.
Here is what the above part of the bill will look like if passed into law and the special character coding is removed:
M. The provisions of Paragraph (A)(1) of this Section shall not apply to any person who is eighteen years of age or older and is not prohibited from possessing a firearm under R.S.14:95.1, 18 U.S.C. 922(g), or any other state or federal law.
SB1 clarifies the current restrictions on carrying a concealed handgun by people who have a state issued concealed handgun permit still apply to those who are exercising permitless carry. Those restrictions include the prohibition on concealed carry in restricted areas. Those areas are already defined by state and federal law. They include detention facilities, courthouses, polling places, and others.
Unless the South Carolina legislature acts quickly, Louisiana will become the next state to remove infringements on the right to keep and bear arms. If both Louisiana and South Carolina pass versions of Constitutional Carry (permitless carry), 29 states will have a version of the law, restoring the legal ability of most citizens to carry a loaded handgun in most public places without first obtaining permission from a government bureaucracy.
As Constitutional Carry, or permitless carry, has been implemented across the 26 existing states, no very little statistically significant change in crime rates has occurred.
If researchers cherry-pick very specific time frames for very specific areas, they can find some instances where crimes have increased. They can also find more areas where crime has decreased. Overall, the effect is relatively small. The major effect is likely a greater respect for the Constitution and the rule of law.
About Dean Weingarten:
Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.
Right on. Sign it, we already have a majority of states that have constitutional carry. We need more so we can say that all of America needs it because the majority has spoken.
Then we can pull a Hillary and say, so many have it, why not all states because “at this point, what difference does it make!”
Time for an amendment to the Constitution requiring blue states to recognize permitless (constitutional) carry!
I don’t think all the red states have it?
Congratulations, Louisiana! I am fairly certain you will beat South Carolina to the finish line by a wide margin. Good on you and on your lawmakers and Governor! After the bill is signed, can we borrow your lawmakers and Governor? 🙂
Hey, will constitutional carry change anything for the rest of us in America? Will we have to worry about reciprocity agreements?
Hi RichDD! If your state passes Constitutional (really permitless) carry, you are good in your home state without a permit. Unfortunately, you will need a permit to enjoy reciprocity in other states that recognize your state’s permits. Hopefully, most states that have Constitutional or permitless carry will recognize the rights of visitors from other states while the visitors are in their state, but that is not always the case. I will likely always renew my permit for the protection it gives me when traveling out of state, same as my LEOSA/HR-218, something I hope inspires politicians to one day give… Read more »
Another feature of the Louisiana Permit is that when you buy a gun, a background check is not required. Your permit is evidence that you would pass it. I just renewed my permit and it is good until 2029.
Very good point, Joe! It is the same here in South Carolina, too!
I become doubtful about South Carolina’s chances for passage, this year or anytime in the next four years. As far as I know, none of the major obstructionists in our Senate have any serious challengers this year, either in the primaries, or from a Democrat or third-party candidate in the general elections in November. If people would stop pulling the straight-ticket party lever and stop rewarding these RINOs with endless additional terms for their betrayals “because they are not a Democrat”, we might have a chance of getting rid of them some day. Sadly, they know how to play the… Read more »
Hi Oldvet! I believe it is legit. I entered and started receiving e-mails from AmmoLand. Good luck to you!
Hey Oldvet, I would love to have it, but if you win it, it is yours. If you don’t own a 9mm, surely you have family or close friends who do, who you would rather give it to than a stranger halfway across the country.
Thank You, Sir! That was a generous offer, but your daughter would be a better choice, I think. Not only can she get in a lot of good practice, those ball rounds will still go “bang” and make a hole in a bad guy or a bad animal, if needed.