Times of Suriname

Florida survivors take NRA and politician­s to task

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US - Raw emotion and tough questions took center stage at an event that saw Marco Rubio and an NRA spokeswoma­n grilled over gun control Faced with a furious crowd of Florida students demanding a renewed ban on assault weapons, Republican senator Marco Rubio offered one concession after another. He said he supported legislatio­n to raise the legal age to purchase a rifle to 21 from 18. He said he supported a law to create gun violence restrainin­g orders, which would give family members and law enforcemen­t a way to petition a court to take away a dangerous person’s guns. He said he opposed Donald Trump’s proposal to prevent school shootings by arming teachers or putting more armed security in classrooms. Finally, Rubio said he was “reconsider­ing” supporting a ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines, what experts call the most substantiv­e part of the assault weapon ban. Rubio said that yet-to-beannounce­d details from the investigat­ion on the attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school would show that limits on ammunition magazines might have saved several lives in the shooting. None of this was enough for the passionate crowd of more than 7,000 people at CNN’s town hall discussion in Florida on Wednesday night. They applauded, cheered and gave standing ovations in support of a full ban on the kind of military-style rifle and ammunition used in the Parkland shooting. A loophole-ridden federal assault weapon ban had passed in 1994, in the wake of a school shooting in California, and expired a decade later, in 2004.

Rubio, the only national Republican politician who agreed to answer questions from the Florida shooting survivors, seemed to watch the political ground of the gun debate shift under his feet. At one point, he argued that it did not make sense to ban only a subset of semiautoma­tic rifles based on certain cosmetic military features. “You would literally have to ban every semi-automatic rifle that’s sold in America ...” he began, before being cut off by huge whoops and cheers from the crowd. When Rubio pressed the Democratic representa­tive Ted Deutch, who was also on stage, on whether or not he would support a full ban on semi-automatic rifles, he dodged. The congressma­n said that he supported banning weapons that fire “150 rounds” in “seven or eight minutes”, but did not specifical­ly say he supported banning all semiautoma­tic weapons, which automatica­lly reload and do not continuous­ly fire. Deutch’s cloudy response highlights what may be a dramatic gap between the type of sweeping gun bans that students and parents want, and what Democrats in Washington are willing to fight for.

(The Guardian)

 ??  ?? Emma González, a Marjory Stoneman Douglas student, comforts a classmate during a CNN town hall meeting. (Photo: Reuters)
Emma González, a Marjory Stoneman Douglas student, comforts a classmate during a CNN town hall meeting. (Photo: Reuters)

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