Miami Herald

On March For Our Lives anniversar­y, call is made for Senate changes

After two more mass shootings, Parkland parents urged the Senate to pass gun-control legislatio­n with a simple majority.

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY adaugherty@mcclatchyd­c.com

On the third anniversar­y of the 2018 March For Our Lives demonstrat­ions around the country, Parkland parents, former Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students and members of Congress pushed for the U.S. Senate to change its rules to allow gun-control legislatio­n to become law with a simple majority.

On Wednesday, Democratic Rep. Ted Deutch, who represents Parkland, said he supports a return to a “talking filibuster,” forc- ing senators to show up in person on the Senate floor to oppose bills that do not have the support of at least 60 senators.

Recently passed House bills that would expand background checks to all gun sales and lengthen the FBI background check review period for firearm purchases from three days to 10 days could become law with a simple majority in the 100member chamber if the Senate eliminates the filibuster.

“The Senate must act, they’ve got to overcome political barriers and procedural barriers,” Deutch said on a call Wednes

day with gun-control advocates and members of Congress after mass shootings in Atlanta and Boulder, Colorado, in the last week. “The president has also talked about the filibuster the way it went before. If that’s one initial kind of reform we can take, then let’s do that.”

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz also supports a “talking filibuster” but said gun-control legislatio­n might be worth doing away with the filibuster altogether. She said Republican­s could avoid the filibuster debate if they vote for background checks.

“There are two fundamenta­l issues that may be worth going further on ending the filibuster: voting rights, and preventing imminent death,” Wasserman Schultz said. “Helping prevent daily firearm suicides and regular mass shootings falls in that latter category, but I’ll leave it to my colleagues in the Senate to make any final call.”

Current Senate rules require 60 votes to cut off debate on most pieces of legislatio­n. But individual senators can register their objections without needing to stand and speak for hours, essentiall­y allowing the minority a powerful tool to block legislatio­n indefinite­ly.

And while then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., blocked bills to expand background checks in 2019 and 2020, Democrats now control the chamber. But reinstatin­g the “talking filibuster” without additional rule changes could allow the Republican minority to continue blocking legislatio­n.

Fred Guttenberg, a guncontrol advocate whose daughter Jaime was killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, went one step further than Deutch and Wasserman Schultz to advocate for eliminatin­g the filibuster altogether, a change that would allow bills to pass the chamber with a simple majority.

“What we saw from Republican­s in the Senate yesterday is they’re going to be irrelevant to the conversati­on. They just don’t care,” Guttenberg said, arguing that most Senate Republican­s don’t have any intention of working with Democrats on gun-control bills. “I think the Democrats in the Senate need to be prepared to move on without them even if it means eliminatin­g the filibuster.”

After last week’s shootings in Atlanta, President Joe Biden mostly focused on rising violence against Asian-Americans after visiting victims’ families. But another mass shooting that led to 10 deaths in Boulder on Mondayprom­pted Biden to demand Congress pass the background-check bills while also banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, two ideas that have less support than the background-check bills that passed the U.S. House this month with bipartisan support.

“We can ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines in this country once again,” Biden said

Tuesday. “I got that done when I was a senator. It passed. It was law for the longest time, and it brought down these mass killings. We should do it again.”

But Biden’s position on Senate rules, for now, is similar to Deutch’s. He doesn’t support eliminatin­g the filibuster altogether.

“In terms of the filibuster, his position remains; it has not changed,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday. “He is not going to allow for obstructio­n to get work done for the American

people, but his preference and priority is working with members of both parties.”

But finding 10 Senate Republican­s to join all 50 Democrats on gun-control legislatio­n could prove difficult. And at least one Democrat, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, has also expressed misgivings about the bills and instead supports a more limited background-check expansion that only includes commercial sales.

Florida Republican Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick

Scott do not support the

expanded background­check bills, even though Florida Republican­s became more likely to buck the majority of their party on gun-control bills after the 2018 Parkland shooting. This month, two of Miami-Dade’s three House Republican­s, Reps. Maria Elvira Salazar and Carlos Gimenez, voted to expand background checks.

Robert Schentrup, a gun-control advocate whose sister Carmen was killed in the 2018 Parkland shooting, said it’s important for advocates and lawmakers to use the latest

attention on the issue to push for change.

“It is important that we seize this opportunit­y,” Schentrup said Wednesday. “The biggest thing I remember from that march is the feeling of hope. The feeling we felt three years ago that things might change. That sense of hope is still with me, but the last three years have taught us that change is not easy, change is not quick.”

 ??  ?? Rep. Ted Deutch
Rep. Ted Deutch
 ?? CHET STRANGE Getty Images/TNS ?? Shoppers are evacuated from a King Soopers grocery store after a gunman opened fire on Monday in Boulder, Colorado. Ten people, including a police officer, were killed.
CHET STRANGE Getty Images/TNS Shoppers are evacuated from a King Soopers grocery store after a gunman opened fire on Monday in Boulder, Colorado. Ten people, including a police officer, were killed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States