Los Angeles Times

Trump tells lawmakers to stand up to gun lobby

He supports firearms restrictio­ns long opposed by the NRA.

- By Christi Parsons christi.parsons @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Trump, in an extraordin­ary White House session open to reporters, told a bipartisan group of lawmakers on Wednesday to send him “one terrific bill” on gun safety, including restrictio­ns based on people’s age and mental health, and stronger background checks — proposals long opposed by the gun lobby.

The president was noncommitt­al when a couple of lawmakers called for a ban on assault weapons like the AR-15 semiautoma­tic rifle used in the Parkland, Fla., school shooting two weeks ago, though few if any expect him to support it given gun groups’ resistance. He alluded to his signature proposal to arm some teachers, but said he would defer to lawmakers on the proposal, which has drawn much opposition.

Throughout the meeting, the president sought to play the conciliato­ry facilitato­r — the deal signer if not the deal maker — on one of the most divisive issues.

“I will sign it and I will call whoever you want me to if I like what you’re doing,” Trump said, adding that legislatio­n must be “very, very powerful on background checks” and “very strong on mentally ill.”

“Let’s get it done,” he said. “That’s what we have to do.”

In response, Republican and Democratic lawmakers said they would need his backing for political cover against the president’s allies in the powerful gun rights lobby to pass any legislatio­n. Senators also gently reminded Trump of the difficulty of getting enough votes — at least 60 — to pass anything in their chamber.

It was the president’s latest call to action since the Florida shooting, but once again he left lawmakers and observers confused about exactly what he wanted to achieve. During the hourlong roundtable discussion that played out entirely in front of TV cameras, Trump told the sponsors of pending bills narrowly written to deal with bolstering background checks to “make it much more comprehens­ive.”

Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the Republican who is the second-ranking Senate leader, was among those who schooled Trump in the realities of the legislativ­e process. “If you can get 60 votes,” Cornyn said, he’d be all for it.

The brainstorm­ing session was Trump’s fourth since the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 14 students and three educators, his first with members of Congress back from recess. Despite his admonition­s to lawmakers to stand up to the gun lobby — “You’re afraid of the NRA,” he told them — the president appeared to protect against ideas that are opposed by the National Rifle Assn., whose leaders have advised him on the subject in recent days.

Trump mentioned several times that lawmakers should not include in a bill a ban on “bump stocks.” Such devices, used by the shooter who killed scores at a Las Vegas concert in October, turn legal semiautoma­tic rifles into virtual machine guns. Instead, he said, Congress should let him do that through executive order.

Trump has directed the Justice Department to propose a federal regulation banning bump stocks, whereas an executive order would not be an appropriat­e measure. Federal regulators have said they need authority from Congress.

A regulatory ban would probably invite lawsuits from gun manufactur­ers, agency officials say. The NRA has said it could support a regulation on bump stocks, but not a law.

After days of vacillatin­g since he had lunch on Sunday with three NRA executives, Trump indicated he remains open to another proposal the NRA doesn’t like, his idea to set a federal minimum age of 21 for buying semiautoma­tic weapons. He said he would give “very serious thought” to that idea, which seemed a step back from last week, when he strongly and repeatedly called for it — before the NRA intervened in opposition.

Trump also said several times that he wants to be the president who finally gets something done to prevent school shootings. When Sen. Christophe­r S. Murphy (DConn.) noted the difficulty of passing a gun law, Trump shot back, “You’ve got a different president now.”

“The gun lobby has had a veto power,” Murphy replied, adding, “It’s going to have to be you that brings the Republican­s to the table.” Trump responded: “I like that responsibi­lity.”

A couple of Republican­s seconded the notion that Trump uniquely could provide them cover.

Trump acted as if he wanted that mantle of leadership. He listened to ideas and sometimes made clear what a bill would have to have in order to win his support.

Unspoken in the conversati­on, however, was the worry of many Republican­s that Trump will push them to take difficult stands on gun control and then reverse course, leaving them without political cover.

Trump urged the lawmakers to be as tough as they can and still come up with something that will pass, even as he brushed off California Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s suggestion that he bless the idea of discussing a ban on assault weapons.

“I really believe it has to be very strong,” Trump said. “I’d rather have you come down on the strong side instead of the weak side. The weak side would be much easier. I’d rather have you come up with a strong, strong bill.”

Feinstein was seated next to Trump. In January he had attacked her in a tweet as “Sneaky Dianne Feinstein” for her actions in the Senate’s probe of Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election and possible Trump campaign coordinati­on, and he expressed hope she would draw election opposition.

The Democrat took advantage of her proximity to the president to at one point hand him a paper showing a drop in the number of assault-weapon deaths in the decade 1994 to 2004, when a ban was in effect, and the rise in deaths since.

Feinstein literally put the issue on the table for the first time since the Parkland shootings, since Trump has ignored it to date.

The president was polite, took the paper, and thanked Feinstein.

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