Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Field is getting crowded for 27th Congressional District race

Chris Collins and Nate McMurray engaged in a ferocious battle in 2018 for the 27th Congressional seat. A rematch may await in 2020, but other candidates may stop that from happening.
WBFO News
Chris Collins and Nate McMurray engaged in a ferocious battle in 2018 for the 27th Congressional seat. A rematch may await in 2020, but other candidates may stop that from happening.

There might be two familiar faces dueling across the 27th Congressional District next year, with Grand Island Supervisor Nate McMurray saying he will take a run for the heavily Republican and conservative congressional seat.

Incumbent Rep. Chris Collins, who defeated McMurray in 2018, is positioning himself for another run despite his federal indictment on insider trading charges. Republicans Chris Jacobs and Beth Parlato are in the race and others may soon join the fray.

McMurray was quick to step into one of the core issues in the 27th District: gun rights.

McMurray said he is a gun owner who wants gun controls because things are out of control, citing a tweet of his a week ago after the mass shooting in El Paso.

"I literally tweeted: I will not be surprised if by the time I wake up, there's another mass shooting and sadly I was right," McMurray said. "Now, it's not because I'm so prescient, it's because this is so common."

In announcing his candidacy over the weekend, McMurray offered his thoughts on other sensitive issues, including climate change.

"There's going to be a time of reckoning, soon enough, where if we don't take this seriously, it's going to have a huge impact, not only on our way of life but on our financial resources," he said.

McMurray also attacked Collins for aligning with President Donald Trump's stance on immigration. He said it does not address the 27th District and its reliance on agriculture.

"I talk to these farmers," McMurray said. "They aren't asking for illegal immigration. They're asking for a migrant labor program, one they've asked for for generations."

Collins said he is willing to consider some limitations on guns, citing red flag laws that would take weapons away from someone who is potentially a threat to himself or others. The Clarence Republican said that has to be on a state level because he is opposed to a one size-fits-all approach of federal legislation.