The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

In interview, Harris touts bold changes to come on immigratio­n, guns, equity

- By Julia Bergman

On two of the hottest issues facing the nation right now — the flow of migrants at the southern border and the two mass shootings that killed 18 people in a matter of a week — Vice President Kamala Harris suggested in an interview Friday the Biden administra­tion will take bold action.

Harris, in a conversati­on with Hearst Connecticu­t Media during her visit to Connecticu­t, stopped short of offering specifics, instead outlining the path forward the administra­tion could take.

And on racial and economic equity, exposed all

the more a national rift by the coronaviru­s pandemic, Harris touted the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, saying it will do for children and families in poverty what years of earlier efforts could not.

When asked whether the administra­tion would take executive action to address gun reform, Harris pointed to President Joe Biden’s “long-standing track record on this issue,” including his involvemen­t in the 1994 federal ban on assault-style weapons, which expired in 2004.

“It’s not about getting rid of the Second Amendment. It’s saying ‘Hey, look, assault weapons, you know how assault weapons have been designed? They’ve been designed to kill a lot of people quickly. It’s a weapon of war. It has no place on the streets of civil society,’” she said after her remarks at the West Haven Child Developmen­t Center.

President Biden, in a press conference this week following the shooting at a grocery store in Boulder, Colo., urged the Senate to pass legislatio­n to close loopholes on background checks for guns.

“Why would you want those?” Harris said Friday. “Well because you just might want to know, before someone can buy a lethal weapon, if they’ve been found by a court to be a danger to themselves or others. You just might want to know, before someone can buy a lethal weapon, if they’ve been convicted of a violent felony.”

Harris said she worked with Biden following the massacre at Sandy Hook when he was Vice President and she was California’s Attorney General.

“We are equally committed to addressing the issue,” she said.

Connecticu­t has “extraordin­ary leaders on this” in U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, she said. “We all feel the same way. There should never be another Sandy Hook.”

At a press conference outside Roberto Clemente School in New Haven earlier Tuesday ahead of the vice president’s arrival, Blumenthal said he planned to talk privately with Harris about gun control measures. A member of his staff confirmed later in the day, that he did have a discussion with her on the issue.

While the vice president’s visit was about how the rescue plan, and specifical­ly the child tax credit, which economists say could lift as many as four million children nationwide out of poverty, Blumenthal said he planned to talk to Harris about gun violence, a leading cause of death among children.

Both Blumenthal and Murphy said they’ve had conversati­ons with the White House about addressing gun control through executive action, which they said officials may consider. But while Murphy said there is some “lowhanging fruit” that Congress and the Biden Administra­tion can take first, Blunenthal said he’s pushing for swifter action now.

Biden recently named Harris the administra­tion’s point person to deal with the immigratio­n issues on southern border. In that issue, she said the United States must address the “root causes” of the migration from Central American countries.

“We can’t just be in a reactive mode,” she said.

 ??  ?? Harris steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Tweed-New Haven Regional Airport in New Haven Friday.
Harris steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Tweed-New Haven Regional Airport in New Haven Friday.

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