The Denver Post

2020 Dems put focus on guns amid fuss over impeachmen­t

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Michelle L. Price

LAS V E GAS» Democratic presidenti­al candidates reiterated their call for gun control Wednesday and urged Americans to keep up the fight for change, sidesteppi­ng the issue of impeachmen­t in Washington and whether it will divert lawmakers.

At a gun policy forum in Nevada, Cory Booker said the National Rifle Associatio­n and the corporate gun lobby are not the only forces stopping progress on gun control.

“Change never comes from Washington. It comes to Washington by Americans that demand it,” the New Jersey senator said. He added later that “Every one of us in America, right now, by doing nothing, we are implicated in this . .... We all have to take responsibi­lity.”

The forum — about 2 miles from the Las Vegas Strip, the site of the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history — was held to keep gun violence front and center of the debate and give 2020 presidenti­al candidates a chance to showcase their plans to combat the epidemic. Negotiatio­ns between President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and lawmakers have halted over background checks legislatio­n passed by the Democratic-controlled House, an effort that faced long odds even before the impeachmen­t inquiry began.

Booker was among nine White House hopefuls to speak at the forum Wednesday, almost two years to the day after a man rained gunfire from the window of a highrise hotel onto a country music festival below, killing 58 people. The forum is being hosted by MSNBC, March for Our Lives and Giffords, the advocacy organizati­on set up by former Arizona congresswo­man Gabby Giffords, who was shot and gravely wounded during a constituen­t meeting in 2011 in Tucson.

Giffords opened the event with brief remarks calling for Democrats, Republican­s and independen­ts to come together and fight for change.

“Stopping gun violence takes courage, the courage to do what’s right, the courage of new ideas,” Giffords said.

In addition to Booker, the other candidates participat­ing in the forum were former Vice President Joe Biden; South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg; former Obama Housing Secretary Julián Castro; California Sen. Kamala Harris; Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar; former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke; Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren; and businessma­n Andrew Yang.

O’Rourke recast his campaign around gun control after the August shooting in his hometown of El Paso, where a gunman targeting Latinos killed 22 people. O’Rourke even vowed to ban assault weapons, saying at a debate in Houston in September, “Hell, yes, we’re gonna take your AR-15, your AK47, and we’re not going to allow it to be used against your fellow Americans anymore.”

Buttigieg on Wednesday said it’s not true that the Second Amendment allowing the right to bear arms prevents the government from banning certain kinds of weapons.

“In America, it is already the case that, anybody, as far as I know, can have a slingshot. And nobody can have a nuclear weapon,” he said. “If you think about it, that means we have already decided, as a society, consistent with our Constituti­on, within the boundaries of the Second Amendment, that there’s a line.”

Warren echoed a key theme of her campaign when she said inaction on gun policy is a symptom of corruption in Washington.

“This is a fundamenta­l question about who Washington works for, and the answer for decades now has been Washington works great for the gun industry — it just doesn’t work great for everyone else in America.”

A challenge for candidates is to distinguis­h themselves on the issue. O’Rourke stands out with his call for a mandatory federal buyback program for military-style weapons used in many mass shootings. That goes beyond the proposals of most other Democratic candidates, who have focused on expanding background checks and banning the future manufactur­e and sale of certain high-powered weapons — but not making it illegal to possess those already in the market.

Castro said Wednesday that he’s open to hearing arguments for a mandatory gun buyback, “but I think there are 15 things — different things — that we can do,” and he said there’s a debate among gun control activists over mandatory buybacks.

Before Wednesday’s forum, Biden released a detailed gun policy plan emphasizin­g his role as a leading senator in adopting a background check law in 1993 and a ban on certain semi-automatic weapons as part of a sweeping 1994 crime law. That ban expired after 10 years.

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