Chicago Sun-Times

Trump adds age limit on guns to his list of policy zigzags

- Ledyard King

WASHINGTON – President Trump’s decision to hold off on proposing an increase in the minimum age to buy any gun from 18 to 21 — after he initially voiced his strong support — shouldn’t come as a shock from someone prone to public zigzagging.

Trump signaled support to senators last fall for a bill to prop up the Affordable Care Act until he backtracke­d the next day.

He told senators in January he was ready to back a bipartisan immigratio­n bill until he reversed course within hours.

Lastweek, he endorsed a summit with Kim Jong Un after he tweeted in October that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was “wasting his time” try--

ing to negotiate with the North Korean dictator.

In a meeting with lawmakers two weeks ago, Trump said, “It doesn’t make sense that I have to wait until I’m 21 to get a handgun, but I can get this weapon at 18,” referring to the AR- 15- style assault weapon that was used to kill 17 people and wound 15 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 14.

Whenthe White House unveiled its school safety plan Sunday night, the only mention of the age proposal was that itwould be one of 11 issues a commission headed by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos would study.

Trump tweeted that he’s “watching court cases and rulings” before proposing an age increase, but he noted there’s “not much political support ( to put it mildly).”

Spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said Monday that the president had not abandoned the idea of raising the gun- buying age but that the plan reflects what the executive branch can achieve now.

“The president ... doesn’t have the ability to just create federal law,” Sanders said. “So what he is pushing forward are things that can be immediatel­y accomplish­ed either through the administra­tion or that have broad- based bipartisan support in Congress.

“But that doesn’t mean that he has wiped away some of those other things.”

Gun control advocates said Trump caved to the National Rifle Associatio­n.

“To no one’s surprise, the president’s words of support for stronger gun safety laws proved to be hollow,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D- Calif., who backs a ban on assault weapons.

At the same meeting Feb. 28, when he discussed raising the gun- buying age, the president alarmed gun- rights supporters by suggesting he would confiscate guns from people who posed threats, then “go through due process.” The plan unveiled Sunday makes no mention of confiscati­on.

Trump was accused of a similar reversal in January when he summoned Sens. Lindsey Graham, R- S. C., and Dick Durbin, D- Ill., to discuss what they thought was his support for their bill to protect undocument­ed immigrants brought to the USA as children. He expressed his opposition when they arrived, they said. That followed promises to protect those immigrants that Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D- N. Y., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., said Trump made them in September.

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