Hoping to survive the 2018 midterms, GOP incumbents seek issues to differentiate themselves from Trump. The elderly constituent in a white blouse would pose a thorny political problem for many Republicans nationwide. Not so for Rep. Brian Mast, who, talking at a senior center in his Palm Beach district, gamely takes on her question: Should semiautomatic weapons be outlawed? The Florida congressman starts by establishing his firearm bona fides, from hunting with his grandpa and becoming an NRA member as a preteen to touting the 9 mm pistol he often carries today. Then, he suddenly pivots to the left: “There are some absolutely incredible holes in the system of how we sell firearms,” the veteran says, including inadequate criminal and mental health background checks and unfettered gun sales in the streets. Recently, he led bills to address those concerns. And if any conservative constituent wants to question his gun competency? Just take one look at his Purple Heart — and the prosthetics this former Army bomb technician walks on, made necessary after he lost both legs to an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan (Mast also lost one finger). Mast’s tack toward stricter gun control is just one way many Republican incumbents in competitive U.S. House districts are seeking issues to differentiate themselves from President Donald Trump ahead of November elections that are trending toward a blue wave. |