Edmonton Journal

Families of Sandy Hook victims lobby lawmakers

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WASHINGTON — Relatives of victims of the Connecticu­t school shootings mounted a face-to-face lobbying effort Tuesday in hopes of turning around enough U.S. lawmakers to gain a Senate floor vote on meaningful gun restrictio­ns as Senate Democrats approach a key decision on gun legislatio­n.

Their effort follows U.S. President Barack Obama’s remarks in Connecticu­t on Monday night on gun control, an issue catapulted into the national arena by December’s gruesome slaying of 20 young children and six educators at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

“If you want the people you send to Washington to have just an iota of the courage that the educators at Sandy Hook showed when danger arrived on their doorstep, then we’re all going to have to stand up,” the president said.

Obama’s proposals — headlined by background checks for more gun buyers and bans on assault weapons and highcapaci­ty ammunition magazines — have hit opposition from the nation’s powerful gun lobby, the National Rifle Associatio­n, and are struggling in Congress. Conservati­ves say they will use procedural tactics to try preventing the Senate from even debating firearms restrictio­ns.

On Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid criticized Republican­s anew for trying to prevent a gun debate, a move that will take a hard-to-achieve 60 votes to overcome in the 100-member chamber.

Reid stood on the Senate floor before a poster-sized photo of a white picket fence with 26 slats, each bearing the name of one of the Newtown victims.

“We have a responsibi­lity to safeguard these little kids,” said Reid, a Democrat.

“And unless we do something more than what’s the law today, we have failed.”

In a hopeful sign for Democrats, at least five Republican senators have indicated a willingnes­s to oppose the conservati­ves’ efforts to block the gun debate. Sixty votes will be needed to head off the conservati­ve stalling tactics in the 100-member chamber.

There are 53 Democrats and two Democratic-leaning independen­ts, though it remains unclear whether any moderate Democrats from Republican­leaning states might support the conservati­ve effort.

“The American people ought to see where everybody stands on this,” said Sen. Tom Coburn, a Republican who said he wants the debate to proceed.

In a written statement, Sen. Mike Lee, a Republican leader of the effort to block the gun debate, said that effort would prevent Obama from rushing the legislatio­n through Congress “because he knows that as Americans begin to find out what is in the bill, they will oppose it.”

Underscori­ng the high emotional stakes, some Newtown families are in the halls of Congress lobbying senators to support gun restrictio­ns, including 11 relatives Obama ferried back to Washington aboard Air Force One after his speech.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Family members of Newtown, Conn. school shooting victims step off Air Force One with U.S. President Barack Obama at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Family members of Newtown, Conn. school shooting victims step off Air Force One with U.S. President Barack Obama at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.

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