The Mercury News Weekend

McConnell appears open to background checks bill

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By The New York Times

Under intense pressure to take action on gun safety in the wake of two weekend massacres, Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, expressed a new willingnes­s Thursday to consider a measure expanding background checks for all gun purchasers, saying it will be “front and center” in a coming Senate debate on how to respond to gun violence.

“There is a lot of support for that,” he said.

McConnell, who has strongly opposed background checks in the past, made his remarks in an interview with a Kentucky radio host, Terry Meiners of WHAS in Louisville. While he did not support a bill requiring background checks, his remarks appeared to underscore the possibilit­y of a shift in the politics of Washington’s divisive gun debate.

McConnell has refused to take up a background checks bill passed by the House because President Donald Trump has threatened to veto it. But Trump appears increasing­ly open to the idea and said recently there is “great appetite for it.” McConnell told Meiners that he had spoken with Trump and said the president was “very much open to this discussion.”

In the interview, McConnell said a background checks bill would likely be considered along with legislatio­n creating incentives for states to adopt socalled red flag laws, which authorize courts to issue special protective orders to take away firearms from those deemed dangerous. He also said he expects discussion of an assault weapons ban, which is favored by Democrats but highly unlikely to pass in a Republican- controlled Senate.

“I think the urgency of this is not lost on any of us, because we’ve seen too many of these horrendous acts,” he said.

But McConnell said he did not intend to bring the Senate back into session from its August recess, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi asked again on Thursday that he do. He said he wanted Senate staff members to work on gun safety legislatio­n so the chamber could take something up when it returns in September.

 ?? MARK LAMBIE — THE EL PASO TIMES VIA AP ?? The FBI has labeled two of the three most recent mass shooting attacks, at the Texas Walmart, above, and the Gilroy Garlic Festival, as domestic terrorism — acts meant to intimidate or coerce a civilian population and affect government policy.
MARK LAMBIE — THE EL PASO TIMES VIA AP The FBI has labeled two of the three most recent mass shooting attacks, at the Texas Walmart, above, and the Gilroy Garlic Festival, as domestic terrorism — acts meant to intimidate or coerce a civilian population and affect government policy.

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