Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gun control debate gains urgency in U.S. Senate.

Senators disagree on how to handle prevention

- Matthew Brown and Savannah Behrmann

WASHINGTON – Senators debated with new urgency Tuesday how to address gun violence in America after a string of mass shootings in the past week, including one Monday that killed 10 people in Colorado.

Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, opened the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing by calling gun violence in the United States a “public health crisis” and asked for “a moment of action. A moment of real caring.”

“Prayer leaders have their important place in this, but we are Senate leaders. What are we doing?” asked Durbin, the committee’s chairman. “We won’t solve this crisis with prosecutio­ns after funerals. We need prevention before shooting.”

On Monday evening, a gunman opened fire at a grocery store in Boulder, Colorado, killing 10 people, including one police officer. A 21-year-old Colorado man now faces murder charges. The shooting comes less than a week after a gunman opened fire on local businesses in the Atlanta area, killing eight people, six of whom were women of Asian descent. The attacks sparked national grief and outrage over racism, misogyny and gun violence.

More than 41,000 people were killed in 2020 by gun violence, a record experts say was driven by the public health, economic and social fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Republican­s and Democrats on the committee agreed that prevention was the best way to stop mass shootings. But they disagreed on how to do so and how far to go. Democrats called for action, specifically on passing legislatio­n that would expand background checks for firearms purchases. Some also called for banning assault rifles.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticu­t Democrat, echoed Durbin’s call to do something beyond thoughts and prayers, saying “inaction has made this horror completely predictabl­e. Inaction by this Congress makes us complicit.”

Blumenthal, saying his Republican colleagues haven’t been willing to offer more than thoughts and prayers, said, “We need to end this epidemic with a comprehens­ive nationwide approach: expanded background checks.”

“Without access to the weapon, the Atlanta shooter is just a racist and misogynist. But armed with a firearm, purchased that very day, he is a monster. A mass murderer.”

Republican­s said expanded background checks would not have played a role in the shootings but would infringe on Second Amendment rights.

“Like many Americans, I cherish my right to bear arms,” said Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, top Republican on the committee. “In the dialogue about gun control, we rarely consider how many Americans are united in their advocacy and enjoyment of this right.”

Republican­s instead pointed to different means to prevent criminals from gaining access to firearms and touted alternativ­e pieces of legislatio­n that would create a task force to prosecute those who fail criminal background checks, among others.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, agreed during Tuesday’s hearing that there have been “far too many tragedies in our country” and something must be done. But, he said, “every time there’s a shooting, we play this ridiculous theater where this committee gets together and proposes a bunch of laws that would do nothing to stop these murders.”

The hearing follows House passage this month of two pieces of gun legislatio­n that now face battles in the evenly divided Senate.

President Joe Biden called on the Senate Tuesday to pass the two pieces of legislatio­n and went further in urging Congress to ban assault weapons.

“We can ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines in this country once again. I got that done when I was a senator. It passed, it was the law for the longest time, and it brought down these mass killings. We should do it again,” Biden said.

The Bipartisan Background Checks Act would expand background checks on people seeking to purchase or transfer firearms. It would not create a registry or other federal mechanisms for review but would expand the cases in which a background check is required for the sale or transfer of a firearm, including for private individual­s and groups, closing the “Gun Show Loophole.” The requiremen­ts would apply to online sales.

The bill passed the House, 227-203. Eight Republican­s voted for it, and one Democrat voted against it.

The Enhanced Background Checks Act of 2021 would similarly close the “Charleston loophole” – a gap in federal law that lets gun sales proceed without a completed background check if three business days have passed, it is linked to a 2015 shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, where a white supremacis­t used the loophole to obtain firearms and killed nine Black worshipper­s during a Bible study at Mother Emanuel AME Church. The bill would extend the initial background check review period from three to 10 days.

The legislatio­n passed the House, 219-210, with two Democrats opposed and two Republican­s in favor.

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