Arab Times

Mayors urge Senate to act on gun safety vote

Protesters chant

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WASHINGTON, Aug 8, (AP): More than 200 mayors, including two anguished by mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, are urging the Senate to return to the Capitol to act on gun safety legislatio­n amid criticism that Congress is failing to respond to back-to-back shootings that left 31 people dead.

In a letter Thursday to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer, the mayors wrote, “Our nation can no longer wait for our federal government to take the actions necessary to prevent people who should not have access to firearms from being able to purchase them.”

The mayors urged the Senate to vote on two Housepasse­d bills expanding background checks for gun sales that passed that chamber earlier this year. It was signed by El Paso, Texas, Mayor Dee Margo, Dayton, Ohio, Mayor Nan Whaley and others where mass shootings have occurred, including Orlando and Parkland, Florida, Pittsburgh and Annapolis, Maryland.

“Quick passage of these bills is a critical step to reducing gun violence in our country,” they wrote.

The push comes as McConnell, the Republican leader, resists pressure to recall senators from the congressio­nal recess, despite wrenching calls to “do something” in the aftermath of the shootings.

Instead, the Republican leader is taking a more measured approach, as GOP senators talk frequently among themselves and with the White House in the face of mounting criticism that Congress is failing to act.

President Donald Trump is privately calling up senators while publicly pushing for an expansion of background checks for firearms purchases, but McConnell knows those ideas have little Republican support. In fact, the White House threatened to veto a House-passed background checks bill earlier this year. Yet, as the nation reels from the frequency of shootings and their grave toll, McConnell’s unwillingn­ess to confront the gun lobby or move more swiftly is coming under scrutiny.

McConnell

Victims

“I can only do what I can do,” the president told reporters Wednesday as he departed Washington for visits to El Paso and Dayton to comfort victims and families and to praise first responders.

Ohio Democratic Sen Sherrod Brown made a personal plea to Trump during his visit to “call on Sen McConnell to bring the Senate back in session this week, to tell the Senate he wants the background checks bill that has already passed the House.”

The politics of gun violence are difficult for Republican­s, including McConnell, who would risk losing support as he seeks reelection in Kentucky if he backed restrictin­g access to firearms and ammunition. Other Republican­s, including those in Colorado, Maine and swing states, also would face difficult votes, despite the clamor for some changes to gun laws.

“In Congress, we’re trying to come up with some answers,” Texas GOP Sen John Cornyn, who is also up for reelection, said after donating blood in El Paso.

In Kentucky, where McConnell is recuperati­ng from a shoulder fracture sustained in a weekend fall, activists have been demonstrat­ing at his home and protesting at his downtown Louisville office.

In the meantime, Trump continues to say there’s “great appetite” for background checks legislatio­n. But that is not the case, for now. Instead, Republican­s are trying to build support for more modest measures, including so-called red-flag bills from Sen Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sen Marco Rubio, R-Fla., that would allow friends and family members to petition authoritie­s to keep guns away from people deemed a threat to themselves or others. But those efforts are also running into trouble from conservati­ves, who worry about due process and infringing on gun owners’ rights.

GOP senators are also considerin­g changes to the existing federal background checks system, modeled on the so-called “fix-NICS” law signed last year that improved the National Instant Criminal Background Check system, as well as strengthen­ing penalties for hate crimes.

While many of those proposals have bipartisan support, Democrats are unlikely to agree to them without considerat­ion of the more substantiv­e background checks bill.

Settle

“We Democrats are not going to settle for half-measures so Republican­s can feel better and try to push the issue of gun violence off to the side,” Schumer said Wednesday.

Sen Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat who, along with Sen Pat Toomey, R-Pa., is pushing a bill to expand background checks, said Trump’s support will be the determinin­g factor in whatever gets done.

“At this point in time leadership comes from President Trump,” Manchin said.

Aiming to play the traditiona­l role of healer during national tragedy, President Donald Trump paid visits Wednesday to cities reeling from mass shootings that left 31 dead and dozens more wounded. But his divisive words preceded him, large protests greeted him and biting political attacks soon followed.

The president and first lady Melania Trump flew to El Paso late in the day after visiting the Dayton, Ohio, hospital where many of the victims of Sunday’s attack in that city were treated. For most of the day, the president was kept out of view of the reporters traveling with him, but the White House said the couple met with hospital staff and first responders and spent time with wounded survivors and their families.

Trump told them he was “with them,” said press secretary Stephanie Grisham. “Everybody received him very warmly. Everybody was very, very excited to see him.” Trump said the same about his reception in the few moments he spoke with the media at a 911 call center in El Paso.

But outside Dayton’s Miami Valley Hospital, at least 200 protesters gathered, blaming Trump’s incendiary rhetoric for inflaming political and racial tensions in the country and demanding action on gun control. Some said Trump was not welcome in their city. There were Trump supporters, as well.

In El Paso, former Rep Beto O’Rourke spoke to several hundred people at a separate gathering. O’Rourke, a potential Democratic 2020 presidenti­al rival, has blistered Trump as a racist instigator, but he also told those in his audience the open way the people of his hometown treat each other could be “the example to the United States of America.”

Emotions are still raw in both cities in the aftermath of the weekend shootings. Critics contend Trump’s own words have contribute­d to a combustibl­e climate that has spawned death and other violence.

The vitriol continued Wednesday.

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