Arab Times

Gun proposals split into 4 bills

Father of US shooting victim speaks on guns

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WASHINGTON, Feb 27, (Agencies): President Barack Obama’s fellow Democrats in the US Senate have spread his gun-control proposals across four bills in an effort to get at least some of the less controvers­ial measures — such as expanded background checks for gun buyers — passed into law.

The Senate Judiciary Committee will vote as early as Thursday on the bills, which together amount to an acknowledg­ement by Democrats that a ban on military-style “assault” weapons is unlikely to clear Congress.

The proposed ban on assault weapons makes up one of the four gun-control bills, all of which are likely to be approved by the Democrat-led Judiciary Committee and be considered by the full Senate, congressio­nal aides said Tuesday.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, will decide how to package the measures for a vote on the Senate floor.

By breaking Obama’s gun-control agenda into pieces, supporters hope to avoid having a less popular proposal such as the assault weapons ban contribute to the rejection of other proposals, aides said.

The proposed ban, introduced by Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, has drawn opposition from Republican­s and some Democrats. It will be the focus of a Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday.

Pragmatic

“We are taking a pragmatic approach that is designed to maximize our options,” a senior Democratic aide said.

The four bills now before the Judiciary Committee include one introduced by Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the panel’s chairman, that would crack down on illegal gun traffickin­g.

Another bill, by California Senator Barbara Boxer, is designed to increase school safety.

A bill, still being finalized, would call for “universal” background checks for all prospectiv­e gun buyers. Currently, only about 40 percent of buyers are screened for previous crimes or mental illness.

Feinstein’s proposal, targets assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips like those used in the Dec 14 massacre at a school in Newtown, Connecticu­t, that left 20 children and six adults dead — and inspired the current action on gun control.

Wednesday’s hearing is likely be the latest in a series of dramatic Capitol Hill hearings to reflect the passion surroundin­g the debate over gun control.

Those scheduled to testify include the father of one of the students killed in Newtown, and a doctor who was in a local emergency room when victims of the shootings were brought in.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said Democrats “are trying to create political theater” with the hearing, and that there is no way an assault weapons ban will become law.

“It faces bipartisan opposition,” he said.

Even so, all four of the gun-control bills are widely expected to sent to the full Senate on party-line votes of 108, Senate aides said.

Support

A father whose 6-year-old son was killed in a Connecticu­t school shooting that revived the national conversati­on on guns was speaking before Congress on Wednesday with others affected by mass shootings in support of legislatio­n to ban assault weapons.

Such a ban faces a difficult time in Congress, where the gun lobby and the Constituti­onal right to bear firearms have strong support. But President Barack Obama has made gun safety a top issue in his second term after the December shooting, which he called the worst day of his presidency.

The US has the highest rate of gun ownership in the world.

Neil Heslin, a 50-year-old constructi­on worker, lost his 6-year-old son, Jesse, along with 19 other young students and six educators in the Connecticu­t shooting. The students were 6 and 7 years old. The shooter, who carried his mother’s legally purchased, high-powered rifle, shot and killed himself.

“It’s a burden, it’s more than a burden on me,” Heslin said in an interview Tuesday as he and three dozen others arrived in Washington to lobby lawmakers. “But I have to do it for my little boy.”

Other witnesses testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee include William Begg, an emergency room doctor who treated victims that day.

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