Houston Chronicle

Bipartisan gun measures pile up in Senate — with no plans to act

- By Laura Litvan

Bipartisan proposals to address gun violence and school safety keep piling up in the U.S. Senate, but there are no plans to vote on them.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t on Thursday became the latest to offer a measure responding to last month’s attack at a Florida high school that killed 17. Their plan would let federal courts temporaril­y take guns away from people found to be at risk to themselves or others.

There was ample indication that the accused Florida shooter, Nikolas Cruz, intended to commit violence with firearms, they said.

“We tell our citizens, if you see something, say something,” Graham said at a news conference in Washington. “Shouldn’t it be incumbent on our government to do something?”

The measure adds to the list of proposals introduced since the Feb. 14 shooting, most of them modest measures due to opposition from the National Rifle Associatio­n that holds sway over majority-party Republican­s and some Senate Democrats on the ballot in November.

President Donald Trump last week whipsawed lawmakers by embracing tough gun controls, including raising the minimum purchase age for a rifle to 21, only to back down after a dinner meeting with the NRA’s top lobbyist.

Still, the president expressed optimism Thursday at the White House on passing some form of legislatio­n such as broadening the background check requiremen­t for gun buyers.

“Background checks are moving along in Congress,” Trump said while adding, “It’s never that easy” to pass such measures.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky told reporters last week that most Republican­s in the chamber want progress on “school safety” measures they can agree on, but he didn’t commit to providing floor time. He said nothing about the issue Tuesday after Senate Republican­s met privately to discuss the chamber’s agenda.

A two-week Senate recess begins March 24, and there are no plans before then to hold a debate on guns in the chamber. McConnell’s press secretary, David Popp, said Thursday that before then, the Senate will consider bills to revise banking regulation and combat sex traffickin­g, vote on a broad government spending bill and perhaps confirm one or two Trump administra­tion nomination­s.

The House is planning a debate as early as next week only on a narrow bill providing grants to train law enforcemen­t and school staff to spot warning signs of school violence and intervene.

That means it’s all but certain that a planned “March for Our Lives” rally in Washington on March 24, organized in part by student survivors of the Parkland, Fla., attack, will occur without real action in Congress on gun laws.

Graham said Thursday it will be up to Trump to help push to debate forward. He and Blumenthal said that the president last week voiced some support for the type of “red flag” law they’re proposing.

Their measure would let law enforcers or family members ask a federal court for an “extreme risk” protective order to prevent someone from buying or possessing firearms for up to 14 days if they are seen as an imminent risk of violence. A hearing must be provided within three days, and if “clear and convincing” evidence of danger is shown, a judge could issue a longer-term order of up to 180 days.

 ?? Tom Brenner / New York Times ?? Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., left, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on Thursday outline their gun reform legislatio­n on Capitol Hill.
Tom Brenner / New York Times Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., left, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on Thursday outline their gun reform legislatio­n on Capitol Hill.

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