Baltimore Sun

GUN LEGISLATIO­N:

President changes tone on guns weeks after mass shootings

- By Jill Colvin

President Trump appears to be backing away from potential support for gun background check legislatio­n, according to White House aides, dimming prospects that Washington will approve new gun measures.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump insisted Tuesday that the U.S. already has “very, very strong background checks” for gun purchases in the latest sign that he is backing away from throwing his political support behind changes to the system that are opposed by the powerful gun lobby.

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump also noted “a lot of the people that put me where I am are strong believers in the Second Amendment,” and suggested he worries about blurring the contrast between Republican­s and Democrats on the issue.

“We have to be very careful about that,” he said.

A gradual rhetorical softening by Trump has taken place in the more than two weeks since gunmen opened fire in El Paso, Texas, then in Dayton, Ohio, leaving more than 30 people dead. Trump said in the tragedies’ wake that he was eager to implement “very meaningful background checks” and told reporters there was “tremendous support” for action.

“We don’t want people that are mentally ill, people that are sick — we don’t want them having guns,” he said.

But in the days since, Trump has changed his tone. He said Tuesday that, while the current system has “sort of missing areas and areas that don’t complete the whole circle,” it is overall “very, very strong” — even though federal law requires background checks only for guns sold through licensed dealers.

And he said he worried about the potential risk of a “slippery slope,” where “all of a sudden everything gets taken away.” Just 11 days earlier Trump dismissed that very same “slippery slope” thinking, which he attributed to the National Rifle Associatio­n. “I don’t agree with that,” he said then.

The waffling drew anger from Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who said if Trump is serious about action he should call on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to put a Housepasse­d background checks bill up for vote.

“These retreats are heartbreak­ing, particular­ly for the families of the victims of gun violence,” Schumer tweeted.

Republican­s have refused to take up several Democratic-backed gun control bills that passed the House, and historical­ly have opposed many efforts to strengthen the nation’s gun laws.

Sen. Chris Murphy, DConn., who spoke with Trump last week, said the president expressed support then for working across the aisle “to come up with a background checks bill that can pass the Senate and save lives.” While he said he would wait to hear from Trump again directly, he compared the episode to Trump’s flip-flop on background checks following the Parkland, Florida, shooting after interventi­on from the NRA.

“It’s time for Republican­s and President Trump to decide whose side they’re on,” Murphy said in a statement. “Are they going to stand with the 90% of Americans who want universal background checks, or are they going to once again kowtow to the desires of the gun lobby?”

Trump, who has reversed course on gun issues throughout his adult life, had insisted when pressed by skeptical reporters earlier this month that this time would be different because the compositio­n of the House and Senate had changed.

But a senior White House official pushed back on the notion that Trump was backing away from support for legislativ­e changes, noting that Trump has repeatedly voiced a desire to get something done.

The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that the White House’s policy and legislativ­e affairs teams have been discussing potential options, in addition to ongoing conversati­ons with members of Congress led by Eric Ueland, the director of legislativ­e affairs.

While two Democrats on the Hill described talks with the White House as largely stalled, others said White House officials have been engaged in continued conversati­ons with Democratic and Republican lawmakers. That includes stafflevel conversati­ons with Murphy’s office since he spoke with Trump last Sunday, according to one Senate staffer.

“The White House has been very responsive to our office,” said Steve Kelly, a spokesman for Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia, who has long pushed a bipartisan expanded background check bill with Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

 ?? SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY ?? People gather at a makeshift memorial outside Walmart last week in El Paso, Texas.
SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY People gather at a makeshift memorial outside Walmart last week in El Paso, Texas.
 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Donald Trump says the U.S. has “very, very strong background checks.”
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Donald Trump says the U.S. has “very, very strong background checks.”

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