Los Angeles Times

Trump wants to arm school staff, retreats on age limit

The president, who ridiculed others for fearing the NRA, won’t seek to raise the age limit to buy rifles.

- By Brian Bennett

WASHINGTON — President Trump is pushing forward with a plan to arm teachers and improve background checks for gun purchases, but has retreated from his promise to raise the age limit to buy certain kinds of weapons, a move many see as caving to the National Rifle Assn.

Trump wrote on Twitter on Monday that there is “not much political support (to put it mildly)” for raising the age limit from 18 to 21 to purchase powerful rifles like the one used to kill 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., last month.

During a meeting with six students and families from the high school in the White House last month, Trump pledged to be strong on increasing the age limit. A recent CNN poll found broad support for the idea, including among Republican­s.

But Trump backed off that stance in recent weeks after a White House meeting with NRA officials.

Rather than push for the comprehens­ive gun legislatio­n he urged Congress to pass just last month, Trump now wants state and local officials to take the lead in setting age limits and other issues.

“States are making this decision,” Trump wrote Monday, making an apparent reference to Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s decision to sign a state law requiring gun buyers to be 21 and imposing a three-day waiting period on most purchases.

The Florida law also allows school staff to carry firearms, an idea Trump has championed but one that is opposed by the National Education Assn., the largest teachers lobby in the country, and other groups.

“Highly trained expert teachers will be allowed to conceal carry, subject to State Law,” Trump wrote on Monday.

The Trump administra-

tion wants to help states provide teachers with rigorous firearms training, a White House official said Sunday night during a call with reporters describing the administra­tion’s efforts to prevent school shootings. But it was unclear whether that meant offering new federal funding.

“The point is that schools should have this tool if they choose to use the tool,” Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said on NBC’s “Today” show. “Communitie­s should have the tools, states should have the tool, but nobody should be mandated to do it.”

DeVos will lead a new commission on school safety to study ways to prevent school shootings and make specific recommenda­tions, the White House announced Sunday.

When asked whether her commission will consider raising the age limit on guns, DeVos said the group would look at it, but she was noncommitt­al about what may emerge.

The commission will also look at how violent movies and video games are rated, how the media cover mass shootings, and whether an Obama-era program to “rethink” school discipline should be dismantled, among other things.

Trump’s creation of another commission was surprising, given his comments Saturday at a campaign rally in Pennsylvan­ia where he derided the usual Washington practice of creating a “blue-ribbon committee” to “talk, talk, talk” about problems, rather than take decisive action.

In addition to the commission, the White House is backing a bill designed to improve the federal background check system used for gun store purchases, and a separate piece of legislatio­n to authorize grants for violence prevention training in schools.

But the White House considers a bill that raises the age limit on gun purchases to be unlikely to pass.

The president has decided to focus first on “pushing through things that have broad bipartisan support” such as background checks, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said. Age limits on guns are “one of those things that will be reviewed,” she said.

“He hasn’t backed away from these things at all,” Sanders said. “We are focused on things we can do immediatel­y.”

The Justice Department is pushing through new regulation­s to ban the sale of “bump stocks” that make rifles fire like automatic weapons, a product used by a gunman to kill 59 people from a window of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas in October.

Trump has also ordered the department to help local police provide firearms training for school staff when requested, the White House said. And he wants to encourage retired law enforcemen­t officers and military veterans to find work in schools.

Trump’s backslidin­g on guns echoed his seesawing on the immigratio­n debate. Last fall, Trump told lawmakers he would “take the heat” on an immigratio­n proposal that protected socalled Dreamers from deportatio­n. But days later, he refused to support a bipartisan compromise that paired border security spending with a legalizati­on program for people brought to the country illegally as children.

It’s also a sign that Trump, even though he has chastised others for being scared of the NRA, isn’t willing to push too hard against the politicall­y powerful gun owners lobby.

“President Trump has completely caved to the gun lobby,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said.

At the White House last month, Trump needled Republican Sen. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia and Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia for being “afraid of the NRA” and not increasing the gun purchase age limit in their bipartisan bill to strengthen background checks on gun sales.

Trump called the NRA “great patriots” in the Feb. 28 meeting but went on to say “that doesn’t mean we have to agree on everything. It doesn’t make sense that I have to wait until I’m 21 to get a handgun, but I can get this weapon at 18.”

 ?? Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images ?? WHEN PRESIDENT TRUMP met with students from Parkland, Fla., last month, he promised to be strong on raising the age limit to buy certain weapons. But the White House now says that such a bill won’t pass.
Mandel Ngan AFP/Getty Images WHEN PRESIDENT TRUMP met with students from Parkland, Fla., last month, he promised to be strong on raising the age limit to buy certain weapons. But the White House now says that such a bill won’t pass.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States