As Tucson voters decided today whether their city should become a sanctuary for undocumented immigrants, Mohave County was still reveling in its move to become a sanctuary for an entirely different group: gun owners.

"The Board affirms its support of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and declares Mohave County a Second Amendment Sanctuary County," reads a resolution approved unanimously on November 4 by the Mohave County Board of Supervisors.

The move follows a recent trend across the southern and western United States for rural municipalities to reaffirm their support for gun rights by calling themselves "sanctuaries," an apparent riffing on other cities' decisions to become sanctuaries for immigrants.

Needles, California, which hugs the western border of Arizona's Mohave County, became a "sanctuary" for gun rights in July.

Mohave County's new resolution doesn't appear to elicit any actual changes in law. If it did, that could be illegal, according to Gerry Hills, the founder of Arizonans for Gun Safety, who pointed out that state pre-emption law blocks cities or counties from making gun policies that are different from state law.

"Either they're going to enforce gun laws, or they're not going to enforce gun laws," Hills said. "And if it's their policy not to enforce gun laws, then that's a violation of the pre-emption law. Municipalities don't get to pick and choose which laws they want to follow."

That law, ARS 13-3108, bans local firearms laws that are "inconsistent with or more restrictive than state law."

But even without any actual policy change, Republican politicians representing Mohave County, including Congressman Paul Gosar, State Representative Leo Biasiucci, and State Senator Sonny Borrelli, appear to support the resolution.

"Although this is symbolic in nature, this reaffirms the county's commitment, as well as mine, to support and defend the U.S. and Arizona constitutions," Borrelli, who represents Lake Havasu City in Mohave County, said in a statement on Tuesday.

As Mohave County's Republicans revel in their new title, Tucson voters sent in their last ballots on the evening of November 5 to decide whether the city will become Arizona's only sanctuary city for immigrants without documentation. If passed, the measure would bar law enforcement officers from taking certain actions to determine the immigration status of people who haven't been detained or arrested.

Joel Feinman, co-founder of the People's Defense Initiative, the organization that brought Tucson's sanctuary city ballot measure, called Mohave County's sanctuary-county declaration an example of "moral bankruptcy," because Republicans in the state legislature have pushed back on Tucson's sanctuary city initiative but not on Mohave County's gun-rights resolution.

"I look forward to filing a brief in the inevitable court case in which we question why the Attorney General and the Republicans in the state legislature seek to discriminate against us for our sanctuary policies but not Mohave County," Feinman said.

He said that the movement to declare cities and counties gun-rights sanctuaries lays bare Republicans' chief strategy: trolling.

"So much of right-wing politics has come down to trolling liberals, so much of it has become not about moral policy or political policy, not even about passing laws that further conservative values, but about doing things that just seem to be designed to troll the other side," he said. "This is a prime example of that."

Hildy Angius, the chair of the Mohave County Board of Supervisors who brought the gun-rights sanctuary county resolution to the board, could not be reached.