Chattanooga Times Free Press

Massacres test resolve to change gun laws

- BY MICHAEL D. SHEAR

WASHINGTON — Days after 19 children and two teachers were gunned down in Texas, politician­s in Washington are tinkering around the edges of America’s gun laws.

A bipartisan group of senators is scheduled to hold virtual meetings early next week and has some proposals on the table: the expansion of background checks, legal changes to prevent the mentally ill and teenagers from getting guns, and new rules for gun traffickin­g.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., the leader of the effort, said he had not seen so much willingnes­s to talk since 20 children were murdered at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticu­t, in 2012.

But the emerging details of the massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, on Tuesday suggest that few of the proposals under discussion would have made much of a difference. The gunman did not have a criminal record that might have been caught by expanded background checks. There is no evidence that the gun had been part of a traffickin­g ring. And so far, there have not been reports of mental illness that might have triggered a so-called red flag law.

More far-reaching efforts — such as banning military-style weapons, raising the age for gun purchases and requiring licensing and registrati­on for firearm ownership — have already been all but ruled out, the result of Republican opposition, Democratic resignatio­n and court rulings.

This month, before the Texas shooting and another massacre at a grocery story in Buffalo, New York, a federal appeals court struck down a California law that banned the sale of some semi-automatic weapons to people younger than 21. Both shootings were committed by 18-year-olds.

The reaction in Washington to the horrific scenes is a familiar combinatio­n of pain and paralysis. There is a sense in Congress, at the White House and around the country that it should, somehow, be different this time.

In Uvalde, anguished parents grew angrier Friday as a top state law enforcemen­t official acknowledg­ed that police were wrong to have waited more than an hour to confront the gunman as he holed up inside a classroom, firing sporadical­ly while students who were still alive lay still among the bodies of classmates. Hundreds of protesters raged outside the National Rifle Associatio­n’s convention in Houston — less than 300 miles from the massacre — where the group was celebratin­g its long-standing partnershi­p with Republican­s to block gun control measures.

“How Many More Kids?” read one sign. “You Are Responsibl­e,” read another, painted to look as if it were splattered in blood.

And yet, even in the wake of the slaughter of so many children, Washington’s leading political players are reprising their usual roles.

“There is more Republican interest and involvemen­t today than any time since Sandy Hook,” Murphy said. “So by definition, that’s different, right? But I also have failed every single time. Almost without exception, these talks, when they start, don’t go anywhere, right? And so I worry about claiming optimism, given that history.”

As the United States entered a holiday weekend on the heels of the two mass shootings, senators headed home for recess. President Joe Biden is set to go to Uvalde Sunday to once again console a community in the wake of unthinkabl­e losses.

What remains is an enormous gap between the scale of the problem — more than 1,500 people have been killed in more than 270 mass shootings since 2009, according to Everytown for Gun Safety — and what America’s political leaders can agree are the right responses to the carnage.

“None of this meets the moment,” said Igor Volsky, executive director of Guns Down America, a gun control advocacy group. “None of this meets the enormity of the crisis that we’re in, both in terms of mass shootings and the everyday gun violence that’s been spiking. None of it. None of it is resetting the conversati­on.”

Polling suggests that many Americans are eager for a broader reset.

Nearly 90% of adults in the United States support the idea of doing more to keep guns out of the hands of mentally ill people, according to a Pew Research Center survey last year. And about 80% of people say gun purchasers should be subject to background checks, even when they buy their guns in a private sale or at a gun show.

But surveys also reflect the deepening polarizati­on in the country, where about 30% of adults say they own a gun.

At the federal level, 51% of Americans favor a nationwide ban on the sale of AR-15 rifles and similar semi-automatic weapons, while 32% are opposed, according to a poll this month by The Associated Press and NORC. Three-quarters of Democrats were supportive, compared with barely one-quarter of Republican­s.

The divide is also wide between people who own guns and people who do not. (Republican­s are roughly twice as likely to say they own a gun than Democrats.)

A sizable majority of people who do not own guns favor banning high-capacity ammunition magazines and creating a federal database to track all gun sales, according to Pew. Fewer than half of gun owners support the same restrictio­ns. By contrast, large majorities of gun owners favor arming teachers in schools and allowing people to carry concealed weapons in more places — changes that are broadly opposed by people who do not own firearms.

The response to mass shootings in the United States is starkly different from the decisive action taken in other developed countries around the world. Britain banned semi-automatic weapons and handguns after shootings in 1987 and 1996. Australia held a mandatory gun buyback after a 1996 massacre, and the rate of mass shootings plummeted. Canada, Germany, New Zealand and Norway all tightened gun laws after horrific crimes.

For Republican lawmakers in the United States, even a national tragedy like the two recent mass shootings may not be enough to break through the fear of angering their supporters, who have been fired up over the past several years by former President Donald Trump, Fox News and social media.

Since 2017, when Trump became president, support for banning assault weapons among gun owners, for example, has dropped to 37% from 48%, according to Pew.

That rigidity by most Republican­s for the past decade has contribute­d to a sense of gloomy inevitabil­ity among Democrats in Congress and at the White House. In remarks the day after the Texas shooting, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, said he accepted “the fact” that Republican­s are unwilling to prevent more killings.

Describing his hope for finding a compromise, he said, “Maybe, maybe, maybe. Unlikely. Burnt in the past.”

Murphy said he spoke Friday to members of Biden’s White House staff, who told him the president was eager to do anything he could to support the nascent negotiatio­ns over new gun safety measures.

“He can’t be hands-off, and he won’t be hands-off,” Murphy predicted. “I think you’ll see him being actively involved over the weekend and into next week.”

But the president and his aides remain wary. There is little appetite for Biden to pledge action that he knows will fail, setting himself up to look politicall­y impotent. Aides also have cautioned that too much involvemen­t by the president could further politicize the debate, making it harder for Republican­s and Democrats on Capitol Hill to reach consensus. And forcing moderate Democrats to take a symbolic, tough-on-guns stand could cost the party even more seats in the midterm elections this fall.

White House officials say it is clear to voters and lawmakers alike that Biden supports aggressive action on gun safety measures and that Republican­s do not. “This isn’t a case of Republican­s hiding their position,” Schumer said on the Senate floor.

Now, White House aides say, it is long past time for the other party to get behind those proposals.

But some activists have run out of patience with that explanatio­n. They say Biden could — and must — be doing more.

“In your recent address to the nation over the tragedy in Uvalde, Texas, you posed the question, ‘Where in God’s name is our backbone?’” Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union, a group that advocates on behalf of children and families, wrote in a letter to Biden on Friday. “We now pose this question back to you as the leader of this nation.”

Rodrigues called on Biden to take executive actions to make guns less accessible, such as changing the way gun sellers are defined so that more of them would be required to conduct background checks. And she urged him to convince Senate Democrats to set aside the filibuster in order to ban assault weapons, raise the age limit for buying guns and vastly expand the federal background check system.

Volsky said he was deeply disappoint­ed in what he called a lack of urgency by Biden after the shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde.

“They have this learned behavior that after tragedies like this one, you say all the right things,” he said of Democrats. “And when all of that fails, you throw your arms up, and you blame the Republican­s. It’s absolutely pathetic.”

Murphy is not exactly optimistic, but he is more hopeful.

He said that taking some small steps with Republican­s could accelerate the decadeslon­g effort to pass new gun safety measures by demonstrat­ing slow but important progress, much the way gay rights and civil rights activists won minor victories before they won big ones.

Murphy said Republican­s need to see proof that they can vote for new gun restrictio­ns and not be punished by voters. Outrage over the deaths in Buffalo and Uvalde could provide Republican­s with a chance to test that theory, he said.

“The story here could be that Congress is discussing a set of measures that are much less than what is necessary to save the maximum number of lives,” Murphy conceded. “But I also have another story, which is, we’ve done nothing for 30 years, and if we were to do something that was significan­t and that demonstrab­ly moved the needle on our gun laws, it would be historic.

“It would,” he said, “break this logjam.”

 ?? MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A prayer vigil takes place Wednesday at the county fairground­s in Uvalde, Texas, the day after a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School.
MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES A prayer vigil takes place Wednesday at the county fairground­s in Uvalde, Texas, the day after a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School.

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