The News (New Glasgow)

Strengthen­ing the system

Trump backs efforts to bolster FBI gun checks

- BY CATHERINE LUCEY AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

President Donald Trump offered support Monday for an effort to strengthen the federal gun background check system as he hunkered down at his private Florida golf course just 40 miles from last week’s deadly school shooting.

Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president spoke on Friday to Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, about a bipartisan bill designed to strengthen the FBI database of prohibited gun buyers.

“While discussion­s are ongoing and revisions are being considered, the President is supportive of efforts to improve the Federal background check system,” Sanders said in a statement.

Trump, who spent the weekend at his private Palm Beach estate, started President’s Day at his nearby golf club. The White House did not immediatel­y answer questions about whether he was playing golf. The president spent most of the weekend at Mar-a-Lago, as White House aides advised against golfing too soon after the shooting at a Parkland high school that left 17 dead.

Trump spent much of the holiday weekend watching cable television news and grousing to club members and advisers about the investigat­ion of Russian election meddling.

In a marathon series of furious weekend tweets from Mara-Lago, Trump vented about Russia, raging at the FBI for what he perceived to be a fixation on the Russia investigat­ion at the cost of failing to deter the attack on a Florida high school. He made little mention of the nearby school shooting victims and the escalating gun control debate.

Surviving students have called for tougher gun control and are planning a march in Washington next month. Trump has focused his comments on mental health rather than guns.

The White House said Sunday the president will host a “listening session” with students and teachers this week but offered no details on who would attend or what would be discussed.

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.

Trump has been a strong supporter of gun rights and the National Rifle Associatio­n. Last year, he signed a resolution blocking an Obama-era rule designed to keep guns out of the hands of certain mentally disabled people.

Kristin Brown, co-president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the measure Trump discussed with Cornyn would help to enforce existing rules but would not close loopholes permitting private sales on the internet and at gun shows. She’s pressing for a ban on assault-type weapons and for laws enabling family members, guardians or police to ask judges to strip gun rights temporaril­y from people who show warning signs of violence.

“We need a comprehens­ive system,” Brown said. “One of these isn’t enough.”

Trump was last seen publicly Friday night when he visited Parkland. He fired off tweets Saturday and Sunday and met House Speaker Paul Ryan on Sunday afternoon. He also visited the golf club Sunday night.

President Barack Obama took heavy criticism in 2014 when he went golfing during a vacation just minutes after denouncing the militants who had beheaded an American journalist. He later regretted playing golf so soon after the killing.

Trump has grown increasing­ly frustrated since the indictment from special counsel Robert Mueller on Friday charged 13 Russians with a plot to interfere in the U.S. presidenti­al election.

On Twitter, Trump stressed that the Russian effort began before he declared his candidacy and asserted that the Obama administra­tion bears some blame for it. He also insisted he never denied that the Kremlin interfered in the 2016 U.S. campaign, although in fact he has frequently challenged the veracity of the evidence.

Trump tweeted about the nation’s “heavy heart” after the shooting in Parkland. But he also sought to use the shooting to criticize the nation’s leading law enforcemen­t agency.

Trump said late Saturday that the FBI “missed all of the many signals” sent by the suspect and argued that agents are “spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign.”

 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL ?? Students hold their hands in the air as they are evacuated by police from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., after a shooter opened fire on the campus.
MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL Students hold their hands in the air as they are evacuated by police from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., after a shooter opened fire on the campus.

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