Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Pressure rises on McConnell, GOP Senate to ‘do something’

- By Lisa Mascaro and Matthew Daly Washington Post contribute­d.

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is resisting pressure to bring senators back from recess to address gun violence, despite wrenching calls to “do something” in the aftermath of back-to-back mass shootings.

Instead, the Republican leader is taking a more measured approach, as GOP senators are talking frequently among themselves, and with the White House, in the face of mounting criticism that Congress is failing to act.

President Donald Trump is privately calling up senators — and publicly pushing for an expansion of background checks for firearms purchases — but McConnell knows those ideas have little Republican support. The White House threatened to veto a Housepasse­d background checks bill earlier this year. Yet, as the nation reels from the frequency of shootings and their grave toll, McConnell’s unwillingn­ess to confront the gun lobby or move more swiftly is coming under scrutiny.

“I can only do what I can do,” Trump told reporters as he departed Washington for visits to Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas, where 31 people were killed in two mass shootings over the weekend.

On Wednesday, Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown made a personal plea to Trump during his visit to “call on Sen. McConnell to bring the Senate back in session this week, to tell the Senate he wants the background checks bill that has already passed the House.”

House Democrats signed onto a letter urging McConnell to act immediatel­y on the House-passed legislatio­n, which would require federal background checks for all firearms sales and transfers, including online and at gun shows. In Kentucky, where McConnell is recuperati­ng from a weekend fall that left his shoulder fractured, activists have been demonstrat­ing at his home and protesting at his downtown Louisville office.

“House Democrats are moving prayerfull­y and purposeful­ly to advance action,” wrote Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a letter Wednesday to Democratic colleagues. The Judiciary Committee, led by Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., may take action during the recess on “red flag” legislatio­n to allow removal of guns from those deemed a threat to themselves or others.

But none of it has moved the Republican Senate to act more urgently.

McConnell’s office declined comment, referring back to a short statement he issued late Monday saying he was tasking three GOP committee chairmen “to engage in bipartisan discussion­s of potential solutions.”

Meanwhile, Twitter locked McConnell’s campaign account from further activity Wednesday as punishment for its sharing of a video of protesters screaming obscenitie­s outside his home in Louisville.

The social media company said it will not unlock @TeamMitch unless it agrees to remove the video.

McConnell’s campaign confirmed to The Washington Post that its account was suspended. The Courier-Journal in Louisville first reported the story.

 ?? LUKE SHARRETT/GETTY ?? Activists demonstrat­e outside Mitch McConnell’s office this week in Louisville, Kentucky.
LUKE SHARRETT/GETTY Activists demonstrat­e outside Mitch McConnell’s office this week in Louisville, Kentucky.

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