Albuquerque Journal

Obama visits Orlando

President renews call for measures on guns

- President speaks of grief, calls for tougher measures on guns

ORLANDO, Fla. — Embracing grieving Orlando families and appealing anew for national action, President Barack Obama claimed a threat to all Americans’ security Thursday as a strong reason to tighten U.S. gun laws. Counterter­ror campaigns overseas, he declared, can never prevent all “lone wolf” attacks like the one that killed 49 people in Orlando.

Speaking at a makeshift memorial to the victims, Obama said the massacre at a gay nightclub was evidence that “different steps” are needed to limit the damage a “deranged” person set on committing violence can do. He cheered on Democrats’ push for new gun control measures, including a new ban on assault weapons and stricter background checks.

Although he showed little hope the measures would find much support among most opponents, Obama seemed to be aiming for other lawmakers, perhaps Republican hawks eager to get behind counterter­ror campaigns but steadfastl­y opposed to gun restrictio­ns.

Obama arrived as Orlando began the next stage of its grief — funerals all over town. A visitation for one victim, Javier Jorge-Reyes, on Wednesday night turned out a crowd of friends, family, drag queens and motorcycli­sts to pay their respects.

“We’re just here to spread love and joy and try to put an end to all the hate,” said Ezekiel Davis — or, as he’s known to some, Sister Anesthesia Beaverhaus­en. Obama could not miss other signs of a community coming together in tragedy. Hundreds of people gathered in 95-degree heat outside the Amway Center stadium where he met with families.

Brittany Woodrough came to honor her close friend, 19-yearold Jason Benjamin Josaphat.

“I just pray for his family and I can’t believe this happened,” she said. “Seeing President Obama here makes it real.”

Orlando’s calls for solidarity stood in contrast to the sharpedged political debate in Washington and the presidenti­al campaign trail that continued during Obama’s visit.

Arizona Sen. John McCain, a Republican and frequent Obama critic, accused the president of being “directly responsibl­e” for the shooting because, he said, Obama had allowed the growth of the Islamic State group on his watch. McCain quickly walked back those comments with a written statement saying he had misspoken and was referring to Obama’s “national security decisions, not the president himself.”

The gunman, Omar Mateen, had made calls during the attack saying he was an IS supporter. But CIA Director John Brennan said Thursday the agency has found no connection between the gunman and any foreign terrorist organizati­on.

In Orlando, Obama noted the need for strong efforts to fight terrorists before they can get to America, but he said that’s not enough.

“It’s going to take more than just our military,” he said. “We will not be able to stop every tragedy. We can’t wipe away hatred and evil from every heart in this world, but we can stop some tragedies. We can save some lives.

“We can reduce the impact of a terrorist attack if we’re smart,” he said, a reference to a ban on assault-type weapons, such as Mateen’s AR-15 rifle.

Obama made his remarks in downtown Orlando during an afternoon visit to express condolence­s to this grieving city. The president spent roughly two hours talking privately with victims’ families and survivors of the attack in a gay dance club. He told them he was inspired by their courage and felt their pain at the loss of so many young lives.

“Our hearts are broken, too,” he said.

Elsewhere in the city and in Washington, investigat­ors were working to reconstruc­t the movements of the 29-yearold shooter before he opened fire at the Pulse dance club, including what his wife may have known about the attack. The Senate Homeland Security Committee’s chairman sent a letter to Facebook asking for help with messages denouncing the “filthy ways of the west” left on Facebook accounts believed to be associated with Mateen before and during the attack.

In his remarks, Obama also expressed solidarity with gays and lesbians who were targeted at the nightclub.

“This was an attack on the LGBT community. Americans were targeted because we’re a country that has learned to welcome everyone, no matter who you are or who you love,” Obama said. “And hatred toward people because of sexual orientatio­n, regardless of where it comes from, is a betrayal of what’s best in us.”

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday visit a memorial to the victims of the mass shooting in Orlando, Fla.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday visit a memorial to the victims of the mass shooting in Orlando, Fla.

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