The Daily Telegraph

Trump ‘supportive’ of improving gun owner checks

In wake of Florida school shooting, president has met senator pushing for change in legislatio­n

- By Ben Riley-smith US EDITOR

DONALD TRUMP is “supportive” of attempts to improve gun background checks, the White House has said, in the first sign since the Florida shooting that his administra­tion backs changes.

The US president has talked to a Republican senator who is pushing for a bipartisan law aimed at making sure those carrying out the checks have all the relevant informatio­n.

A carefully worded statement from the White House said Mr Trump backed the drive in general but fell short of a full-throated endorsemen­t for the proposals.

The legislatio­n is limited in scope, encouragin­g government agencies to hand over relevant informatio­n to those doing the checks but not changing the rules on who can buy a gun. It comes after criticism of the FBI over its handling of a warning about Nikolas Cruz, the 19-year-old suspected of killing 17 at a Florida high school last week.

Mr Trump reportedly sounded out members at his Mar-a-lago club about whether he should champion gun control measures after the attack.

It suggests Mr Trump, who has repeatedly defended the right for Americans to own guns and rejected calls for more controls, is considerin­g a change in stance. In November, John Cornyn, the Republican senator, announced a bipartisan bill alongside Chris Murphy, a Democratic senator, aimed at improving the background checks system.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said: “The president is supportive of efforts to improve the federal background check system.”

The bill was proposed after a man killed 26 people at a Texas church last year, only for it to emerge that he should have been banned from buying a firearm. His history of domestic abuse was known by the US Air Force, his former employer, but had not been passed to those who carry out background checks.

The FBI last week admitted it had failed to act properly over a specific warning about Cruz as a potential gun attacker. Local police had also reportedly received 20 calls about him.

The senators’ proposals, dubbed the Fix Nics Act, focuses on the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (Nics), which is maintained by the FBI. The database is cross-checked to determine if a prospectiv­e gun buyer has a criminal record or is ineligible to purchase a weapon.

It relies on informatio­n being passed on by government agencies – something that the senators pushing the bill believe is not happening properly.

The legislatio­n would force state and central government agencies to draft plans for how to better pass on background informatio­n to the database.

However the legislatio­n does not tighten the rules on who can buy a gun – something that victims, politician­s and campaigner­s have been calling for.

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