Gun Sales Continue to Soar, Texas Sets Another Record for Background Checks
Amidst the coronavirus lockdown and violence erupting in American streets, Texas saw the highest number of background checks for gun sales conducted in the month of June.

In a typical year, gun sales in Texas tend to slow down during the hot summer months. But this year, the Lone Star State set a record high for the number of firearm background checks conducted in the month of June.

According to data published by the FBI, there were a total of 227,232 NICS checks conducted in Texas throughout June, about 27 percent higher than the checks conducted last month.

That total is the fourth highest record for the state, just behind March’s high of 274,211 and approximately 240,000 checks conducted in the Decembers of 2012 and 2014.

While the NICS checks conducted in March may be the highest on record, June’s numbers represented a larger increase compared to the same months as last year.

In Texas, March 2020 saw a notable 94 percent increase in checks from March 2019, but June 2020 saw a 123 percent increase from June 2019.

Nationally, NICS checks have followed a similar trend. March 2020 was up by 41 percent over the same month last year, while June was up by 70 percent.

Several factors could have played a role in the dramatic increase in gun sales this year.

Texas gun store owners saw a surge in demand for firearms and ammunition during the second weekend in March when local governments began to mandate lockdowns and oil prices were plummeting.

Many Texans may have purchased a gun for self-defense in the wake of the national chaos that erupted after the killing of George Floyd, since many violent, Marxist groups like Antifa have taken advantage of the tense political climate.

Being an election year is also a notable factor. Although no single month in 2016 reached a record high for the number of NICS checks in Texas, the year as a whole is the highest on record.

With the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Joe Biden, stating that he would have former Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke help him lead on the issue of gun control, conservative Texans are likely concerned about a potential Biden victory in November.

After O’Rourke — a former congressman from El Paso — made headlines for saying, “Hell, yes, we’re going to take your AR-15, your AK-47,” many rural counties across the state began declaring themselves “Second Amendment sanctuaries.”

Regardless of gun-buyers’ motivations, the state is on track to surpass the record number of checks conducted in 2016 with less than 600,000 needed to match that year’s high.

Since gun sellers in the state conducted 123,000 checks on average per month last year, it would take a dramatic decline in sales to avoid a new annual record.