The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

■ Trump asks Congress to send him bill to curb gun violence, and says he might use executive order to ban bump stocks,

- By Mike DeBonis

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump launched into a freewheeli­ng, televised strategy session with lawmakers over the issue of guns by declaring that he will unilateral­ly bar so-called “bump stocks” and asking Congress to send him one “terrific” bill aimed at reducing gun violence.

“I’m going to write that out,” Trump said of bump stocks — devices that allow semiautoma­tic weapons to fire like fully automatic weapons — while speaking to lawmakers gathered at the White House for a much-touted summit on gun safety. Saying he can bar bump stocks with an executive order, Trump added: “You won’t have to worry about bump stocks.”

Trump also pressed lawmakers to send him “one terrific bill” combining several proposals aimed at reducing gun violence, although that could complicate the legislativ­e outlook for such a contentiou­s issue. Congress is already struggling to clear a relatively noncontrov­ersial measure meant to simply improve the reporting of key informatio­n to a federal background-checks database.

“It would be so beautiful to have one bill,” Trump told lawmakers at the White House.

The session came weeks after a deadly high school shooting in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 dead and spurred fresh calls for action to tighten gun restrictio­ns.

Hours before the summit, Democrats called on Trump to back expanded background checks, throwing their weight behind a measure that failed to advance through Congress after the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.

Now, in the wake of the Feb. 14 high school shooting, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and other top Democrats think that Trump could help muscle through a measure that has long been opposed by the National Rifle Associatio­n and many Republican lawmakers.

Trump tweeted support this month for “comprehens­ive” background checks, and Republican leaders have interprete­d that as support for a narrow measure aimed at improving the reporting of disqualify­ing offenses to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS.

But Democrats are looking at a much broader expansion of background checks, pushing legislatio­n that “at minimum” would mandate them for all private gun sales — including those conducted at gun shows or over the Internet. Currently, only federally licensed firearms dealers must conduct such checks.

“It makes no sense that an individual who is denied a gun by a federally licensed dealer can simply visit a gun show or go online to purchase the same gun that they were denied at the store,” said the letter sent to Trump on Wednesday, signed by Schumer and fellow Democratic senators Bill Nelson of Florida, Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota.

In 2013, just months after the Sandy Hook tragedy, a version of the legislatio­n was proposed by Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Patrick Toomey, R-Pa. It failed to advance on a 54-46 vote, falling short of the necessary 60. Five Democrats and 41 Republican­s opposed it.

The NRA opposed the legislatio­n at the time, arguing that it “will not prevent the next shooting, will not solve violent crime and will not keep our kids safe in schools.”

Manchin and Toomey have expressed a willingnes­s to revisit their legislatio­n, and a number of senators who voted no in 2013 have said since the recent shooting in Florida that they might be willing to reconsider their positions.

“Were you to endorse legislatio­n to require a background check on every gun purchase, without other poison pill provisions attached, we could finally move much closer toward the comprehens­ive system that you called for after the Stoneman Douglas attack,” the Democratic senators wrote.

 ?? GEORGE FREY / GETTY IMAGES 2017 ?? A bump stock device (left) that fits on a semi-automatic rifle to increase the firing speed is installed on a AK-47 semi-automatic rifle (right) in Salt Lake City, Utah.
GEORGE FREY / GETTY IMAGES 2017 A bump stock device (left) that fits on a semi-automatic rifle to increase the firing speed is installed on a AK-47 semi-automatic rifle (right) in Salt Lake City, Utah.

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