I oppose any efforts that infringe upon these rights and violate the Constitution.
Oppose any efforts that infringe on Second Amendment rights and violate the Constitution.
Occurrences
I will never support any legislation that enables the government to trample on our Second Amendment rights.
Evidence
Steube's congressional issue page states that he supports legislation protecting the right to self-defense and that he opposes efforts that infringe on Second Amendment rights and violate the Constitution.
The House Clerk's roll call for H.R. 8 shows Greg Steube voted 'Nay' on passage of the Bipartisan Background Checks Act, a major gun-restriction bill.
The House Clerk's roll call for H.R. 1446 shows Greg Steube voted 'Nay' on passage of the Enhanced Background Checks Act of 2021.
Congress.gov shows Steube introduced H.R. 454, the Safe Bases Act of 2025, to authorize concealed-carry permits for eligible active-duty service members on military installations; the bill was introduced and referred to committee.
The official Steube House issue page states: "Throughout my tenure in Congress, I have supported legislation that protects our God-given right to self-defense, and I oppose any efforts that infringe upon these rights and violate the Constitution."
The House Clerk's roll call for H.R. 1446 records Greg Steube voting "Nay" on passage of the Enhanced Background Checks Act of 2021.
Assessments
This is a broad federal legislative-position promise to oppose efforts viewed as infringing Second Amendment rights. The evidence shows Steube maintained the stated position in office and took concrete same-term actions consistent with it, including recorded Nay votes on major firearms-restriction bills H.R. 8 and H.R. 1446 in 2021, plus introducing pro-firearm-carry legislation in 2025. Because the promise is framed as opposition rather than enactment of a specific statutory outcome, these official votes and legislative activity are sufficient to count as fulfilled during his House service.
Steube made and maintained the stated Second Amendment position, voted against major firearms-restriction bills such as H.R. 8 and H.R. 1446 in 2021, and later introduced pro-gun-rights legislation in 2025. For a congressional promise framed as opposition to infringements rather than enactment of a specific law, recorded votes against restriction measures are sufficient to count as delivery.