The Citizen (KZN)

Trump’s sights on gun control

DEADLY FLORIDA SCHOOL SHOOTING SPARKS NATIONWIDE WAVE OF ACTIVISM

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President Donald Trump on Wednesday went his furthest yet toward endorsing restrictio­ns on gun sales, bucking Republican Party orthodoxy as he challenged lawmakers to go big on legislatio­n he said would help prevent more school shootings.

The US president said he wanted to go beyond a narrowly focused Bill to improve background checks for gun buyers that is backed by many of his fellow Republican­s and instead develop a comprehens­ive plan – even if it includes measures opposed by the powerful National Rifle Associatio­n gun lobby, which backed his 2016 candidacy.

“I will sign it,” Trump said in a freewheeli­ng hour-long discussion at the White House with a group of lawmakers.

Trump had been cautiously weighing changes to gun laws since a gunman killed 17 people at a high school in Parkland, Florida, on February 14, igniting a wave of national student activism in support of firearms restrictio­ns.

During Wednesday’s session, Trump, who has championed gun rights, embraced broader changes to the background check system than those contained in a proposal from John Cornyn of Texas, the No 2 Senate Republican.

“You have to be very, very powerful on background checks. Don’t be shy,” Trump said. “It would be nice if we could add everything on to it.”

The White House was set to present a list of Trump’s policy decisions on the issue as early as yesterday.

It was unclear whether his fellow Republican­s would go along with his newfound enthusiasm, wary of angering voters who fiercely oppose curbs on gun ownership, particular­ly ahead of the November elections in which the party’s control of Congress will be at stake.

Pushing to expand Cornyn’s Bill, which has been gaining steam

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