The Press

Biden moves to tackle America’s gun ‘epidemic’

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President Joe Biden waded into one of the most contentiou­s issues in American politics yesterday by unveiling new measures designed to stem gun violence.

Speaking in the White House Rose Garden to an audience that included those who had lost loved ones in mass shootings in recent years, Biden denounced members of Congress for offering plenty of thoughts and prayers but little in the way of concrete action to stop the deaths of hundreds of people. ‘‘Gun violence in this country is an epidemic,’’ he said to applause. ‘‘And it’s an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent.’’

He thanked those who had the courage to campaign on the issue and ‘‘to turn pain into purpose and demand that we take the action that gives meaning to the word ‘enough’’’.

He added: ‘‘Enough! Enough! Enough!’’

Biden made gun control one of the central pillars of his campaign for the presidency last year but has been accused by some of making slow progress on the issue. The calls for action grew louder last month after attacks in Atlanta and Boulder that left 18 dead.

While mass shootings capture the public’s attention, Biden emphasised that he also sees gun control as a means of limiting individual murders, and domestic violence against women. On average, he said, 316 people are shot somewhere in the US every day, and 106 of them die.

Mass shootings – defined as incidents in which at least four people are killed at the same time – have fallen during the pandemic but the overall number of gun-related deaths across the US has risen dramatical­ly.

Biden said he had ordered the Department of Justice to devise gun control measures he could pass personally, without involving Congress. He said he would stop the proliferat­ion of so-called ghost guns; kits that allow a firearm to be assembled by the buyer from separate pieces, which can take as little as half an hour to construct. He said he would order manufactur­ers to include a serial number so that they could be traced, like other guns, and insisted that background checks be carried out on those buying the kits. He would also make it harder for people to modify pistols with arm braces, which stabilise the guns and make them more accurate, effectivel­y turning them into short-barrelled rifles. The suspect in the Boulder shooting used one in his supermarke­t attack, killing 10 people.

Biden said the braces would be subject to the Firearms Act, meaning that anyone buying one would face a minimum fee of US$200 (NZ$283) and have to give their name to the Department of Justice.

The department will also publish model ‘‘red flag’’ legislatio­n for individual states. The White House does not have the power to pass such a law nationally but the measures, if adopted by states, allow police or family members to petition a court to temporaril­y remove guns from those presenting a danger to themselves or others.

The department also plans to release a comprehens­ive report on firearms traffickin­g, the first since 2000. A new permanent director of the agency overseeing gun control has been appointed.

Biden was joined in the Rose Garden by Kamala Harris, the vice-president, Merrick Garland, the attorney-general, and the former Congresswo­man Gabby Giffords. She was shot and almost killed 10 years ago at a campaign event in Tucson, Arizona.

Biden has long been an advocate of tighter gun controls: as a senator in 1994 he was one of the architects of a law that banned assault weapons. The bill passed Congress only after a 10-year ‘‘sunset clause’’ was included, and the legislatio­n expired in 2004 when President George W. Bush decided against renewing it.

The fact that Biden has had to resort to executive orders indicates the intransige­nce of Congress over the issue today. Getting a similar bill to the 1994 act passed will be almost impossible given the arithmetic in the Senate.

Executive orders allow the president to quickly make federal laws, but they do not enjoy the backing of Congress. They can be undone at the stroke of a pen by a new president.

The House of Representa­tives, where the Democrats have a more substantia­l majority than the Senate, passed two bills last month aimed at expanding and strengthen­ing background checks for gun buyers, and giving officials longer to vet applicants. Yet the bills have virtually no chance of passing through the Senate, where the Democrats have a razor-thin majority. They would need a super-majority of 60 votes, meaning the backing of at least 10 Republican­s, assuming all Democrats backed the bill in the upper chamber – and that is by no means a given.

‘‘I’ve said before, my job, the job of any president, is to protect the American people,’’ Biden said yesterday, pressing for assault weapons to be banned again, alongside high-volume magazines. ‘‘Whether Congress acts or not I’m going to use all the resources at my disposal as president to keep the American people safe from gun violence.’’

 ?? AP ?? President Joe Biden gestures as he speaks about gun violence prevention in the Rose Garden at the White House.
AP President Joe Biden gestures as he speaks about gun violence prevention in the Rose Garden at the White House.

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