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Lewiston survivors eye looming election as gun control returns to forefront after mass shooting

Lewiston, Maine — Ben Dyer hasn't decided how he'll vote in one of the nation's most closely watched congressional elections this year, but he knows guns will be on his mind when he casts his vote. And he's pretty sure he won't be the only one.

Dyer, 47, a father of two, was shot five times at Schemengees Bar & Grille in Lewiston last October in the deadliest mass shooting in Maine history. He was rushed to hospital in a game warden's van. He still can't use his right arm.

In the wake of a bloody tragedy in which 18 people were killed and many others injured at two separate crime scenes, Dyer saw his state pass a battery of new gun control laws. It is against this backdrop that he and other voters in Maine's 2nd Congressional District will consider the political future of three-term Congressman Jared Golden.

Golden, a Democrat who has long supported gun rights in ways that run counter to his party's orthodoxy, has changed his position since the Lewiston shooting. A former Marine who served in two overseas wars, he now supports a ban on assault weapons. He is unopposed in Tuesday's Democratic primary in Maine, but the two Republicans vying to run against him in November have both pledged to defend 2nd Amendment rights more vigorously than he has.

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