Kuwait Times

Biden mourns with shooting survivors

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MONTEREY PARK: President Joe Biden mourned Tuesday with Asian American survivors of a mass shooting in a Los Angeles suburb and wielded his limited powers to tighten firearms controls, while pressuring Congress to “do something big.”

A somber president addressed the immigrant community in Monterey Park, praising their resilience and recalling characteri­stics of each of the 11 people slaughtere­d in January during Lunar New Year celebratio­ns. He recalled the strength of a loving “matriarch,” a karaoke singing grandmothe­r, and the 72-year-old manager and dance teacher at the Star Ballroom where the massacre occurred. Applause broke out when Biden heralded Brandon Tsay, the 26-year-old who wrestled the gun from the shooter before he could open fire at a second ballroom.

“He found the courage to act,” Biden said, also getting applause when he highlighte­d the best picture Oscar for “Everything Everywhere All At Once”-a sci-fi film centered on a Chinese American family that he said “made history.”

Biden then urged Congress, where Republican­s have pushed back for decades against stricter gun purchase laws, to take “responsibi­lity” and to clamp down on the hugely popular semi-automatic, military style rifles most often used in mass shootings. “Ban assault weapons,” he urged to cheers from the audience of around 200 people. “Do it now. Enough! Do something. Do something big.”

Background checks tightened

Of several measures enacted Tuesday by Biden, the most consequent­ial was an executive order tightening rules on background checks. Polls show overwhelmi­ng popular support for a blanket rule requiring that anyone purchasing a firearm be checked for a criminal record.

However, Republican­s in Congress argue this impinges on the constituti­onal right to own weapons and should be left up to individual states to decide. Currently, only federally licensed dealers-responsibl­e for less than half of gun sales-are required to run background checks nationwide. In addition, some states have imposed their own additional requiremen­ts.

Biden’s order directed the attorney general to clamp down on vendors failing to carry out the checks and also to clarify who qualifies as a dealer. The rule “directs my attorney general to take every lawful action possible to move us as close as we can to universal background checks without new legislatio­n,” Biden said. “It’s just common sense-to check whether someone is a felon or a domestic abuser before they buy a gun.” Biden also said his executive order-an action a president can implement without congresion­al approval, though only through federal rather than individual state agencies-will also tighten the screws on irresponsi­ble gun dealers.

 ?? — AFP ?? MONTEREY PARK: US President Joe Biden speaks on his efforts to reduce gun violence, at The Boys & Girls Club of West San Gabriel Valley, in Monterey Park, California.
— AFP MONTEREY PARK: US President Joe Biden speaks on his efforts to reduce gun violence, at The Boys & Girls Club of West San Gabriel Valley, in Monterey Park, California.

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