New York Daily News

‘It’s high noon in America’ on gun violence, Adams warns Congress

- BY MICHAEL MCAULIFF, CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T AND DAVE GOLDINER

Mayor Adams told Congress on Wednesday that it’s high time lawmakers take firm action to restrict guns and end the plague of mass shootings.

Speaking on the heels of the massacres in Buffalo and Uvalde, Texas, Adams said Americans are counting on elected officials to make common-sense changes to protect their kids and communitie­s.

“It is high noon in America,” Adams said. “It’s time for every one of us to decide where we stand on the issue of gun violence.”

“We must do it now,” he added. Hizzoner called it a disgrace that virtually every day brings another spasm of gun violence.

“In our country, the country I love, the clock is ticking every day toward another hour of death,” he said.

Adams spoke as part of a panel before the House Oversight Committee led by fellow New Yorker Rep. Carolyn Maloney. The Manhattan

Democrat kicked off the hearing by demanding action to make deadly weaponry harder to obtain.

“As a society, we are failing our children and we are failing each other,” Maloney said. “This out-ofcontrol gun violence is a uniquely American tragedy.”

The Democratic-led House of Representa­tives is preparing to vote on a package of gun laws dubbed the Protect Our Kids Act. The measures include raising the minimum age to 21 to buy a semiautoma­tic rifle, tougher background checks and banning the sale of high-capacity magazines that are an indispensa­ble tool to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible.

The mayor spoke of his previous career as a police officer before he ran for City Hall on a law-and-order platform. “My greatest responsibi­lity is protecting the people of the City of New York,” he said. “This is my calling, my duty, my life’s work.” “I need your help,” Adams said. Adams earlier met with members of the city’s congressio­nal delegation. But New York’s Democratic progressiv­es Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Jamaal Bowman skipped the meeting.

The mayor was also joined by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) in a statement decrying the mass killings.

Adams and Nadler, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, called for immediate action to close loopholes that have made it frightenin­gly easy for would-be killers to obtain the weapons that are essential to carrying out their sick crimes.

Adams insisted he was not taking sides in the brutal Manhattan Democratic primary between Nadler and Maloney, noting he joined Nadler for the statement but appeared at Maloney’s committee hearing.

“I’m not picking sides. These are issues that politics is not in the place of,” he said. “This is not Democrat, or Republican or campaign issues. These are public safety issues.”

The laws are likely to pass the House but are virtually dead on arrival in the Senate, where pro-gun Republican­s hold effective veto power.

Separate talks are taking place between Senate leaders from both parties on a much weaker package that might attract enough GOP support to overcome a certain filibuster effort by conservati­ves.

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