Both of those articles are more than a month old.chasfm11 wrote:Here is confirmation:TexasGal wrote:Idiot. My guess is he had a motivation to jump in and make a big splash as a wrangle for a 2016 run. He thought he would be a hero. Oops, the overwhelming angry lash back has shown running on a platform of being the meanest toughest anti ever might not win as many votes as he thought. That and his "reality" had a head on collision with "the reality". But that's just a theory.
http://online.wsj.com/article/AP3ba086d ... e7e3b.html
And it isn't over yet
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/nyreg ... .html?_r=0
Andy is not admitting any "illogic" only that the magazine ban as written is unworkable. Believe me, if he could find a way to make it work, logic notwithstanding, the ban would stay.The Annoyed Man wrote:http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/21/nyreg ... .html?_r=0
New York Governor Favors Easing Newly Passed Gun LawAnother democrat liar (but I repeat myself) hoisted by his own petard. The governor is now having to admit the absolute illogic of his flagship bill.ALBANY — In the wake of the elementary school massacre in Newtown, Conn., Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York pushed through the State Legislature gun control measures that included not only a tougher assault weapons ban but also a tighter restriction on the maximum legal capacity of gun magazines.
But after weeks of criticism from gun owners, Mr. Cuomo said on Wednesday that he would seek to ease the restriction, which he said had proved unworkable even before it was scheduled to take effect on April 15.
The gun-control law, approved in January, banned the sale of magazines that hold more than seven rounds of ammunition. But, Mr. Cuomo said Wednesday, seven-round magazines are not widely manufactured. And, although the new gun law provided an exemption for the use of 10-round magazines at firing ranges and competitions, it did not provide a legal way for gun owners to purchase such magazines.
As a result, he said, he and legislative leaders were negotiating language that would continue to allow the sale of magazines holding up to 10 rounds, but still forbid New Yorkers from loading more than 7 rounds into those magazines.
BTW, the 7 round limit was probably not his idea in the first place, he's just not that knowledgeable, it was that of a downstate demoncrat, such as Sheldon Silver, who probably had the bill waiting for just such a bloody eventuality.