Trump backs effort to toughen FBI checks
AS TEENS PROTEST, PRESIDENT HINTS AT SUPPORT FOR TOUGHER CHECKS ON WEAPONS BUYERS
As dozens of teens spread their bodies across the pavement outside the White House Monday to symbolize the dead and call for stronger gun controls, President Donald Trump offered support for a limited strengthening of federal background checks on gun purchases.
Trump has stayed largely mum in the last few days about the victims of the Florida school massacre and the escalating debate about controls on weapons.
One side of that debate was represented by the “lie-in” outside the White House, a precursor to a march in Washington planned next month by survivors of the Parkland school shooting and supporters of their cause.
Ella Fesler, a 16-year-old high school student in Alexandria, Va., was among the students at the lie-in in front of the White House. She said it was time for change, adding: “Every day when I say ‘bye’ to my parents, I do acknowledge the fact that I could never see my parents again.”
At his Florida club just 65 kilometres from the community ravaged by the shooting that left 17 dead last week, Trump gave a nod toward a specific policy action, with the White House saying he had spoken Friday to Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, about a bipartisan bill designed to strengthen the FBI database of prohibited gun buyers.
Spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders qualified the support, stressing that talks continue and “revisions are being considered,” but said “the president is supportive of efforts to improve the federal background check system.”
The main action Trump has taken on guns in office has been to sign a resolution blocking an Obama-era rule designed to keep guns out of the hands of certain mentally disabled people. The president has voiced strong support for gun rights and the National Rifle Association.
The bipartisan background check legislation would be aimed at ensuring that federal agencies and states accurately report relevant criminal information to the FBI.
It was introduced after the Air Force failed to report the criminal history of the gunman who slaughtered more than two dozen people at a Texas church.