House debates and passes floor substitute on assault‑weapons measures after heated floor exchanges

Virginia House of Delegates · March 4, 2026

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Summary

Delegates engaged in extended floor debate March 4, 2026, over SB749 and related firearms measures; supporters framed the proposal as a public-safety step to remove weapons 'functionally similar' to those used in mass shootings, while opponents warned the language could criminalize common firearms and invite legal challenges. The House adopted a floor substitute and passed the measure.

RICHMOND — A string of firearms measures drew extended attention on the House floor March 4, with lawmakers sparring over scope, enforceability and constitutional risk.

Sponsor Delegate Helmer told the chamber the floor substitute for Senate Bill 749 would prohibit the sale, transfer and import of weapons whose characteristics are similar to weapons used in war zones and limit magazines to 15 rounds. "Our children shouldn't be afraid to go to school," Helmer said in support of the measure, describing it as an effort to keep weapons used in mass shootings out of public life.

Opponents argued the language sweeps too broadly. "We're creating criminals out of people who wanna drive to their next door neighbor's farm and their pickup truck," Delegate Maguire said on the floor, warning that common firearms and ordinary conduct could fall within the bill's definitions. Several members flagged the risk of constitutional litigation if the measure were enacted as written.

Floor debate included questions about exemptions for law enforcement, the military and whether existing code sections cited in the substitute provided adequate carve-outs for hunting and sporting uses. Supporters said the substitute included exemptions and grandfathering provisions to allow lawful owners to transfer or sell firearms in federally licensed transactions and to permit certain outbound transport.

After debate, the House adopted the floor substitute and recorded final passage of the measure in a roll-call vote. The transcript shows recorded vote tallies for floor actions and final passage; the measure will move to conference or final enrollment as required by legislative procedure.

What lawmakers said: proponents emphasized public-safety outcomes and recounted past mass-shooting tragedies as motivation. Opponents warned of legal exposure and of creating enforcement challenges for local law enforcement.

What happens next: Because the bill passed with a floor substitute, it may require conferees if the Senate's position differs; sponsors and opponents said they expect legal challenges could follow if the measure becomes law.