Miami Herald

Florida Senators Rubio and Scott reveal how they’ll vote on gun bill

- BY ALEX ROARTY aroarty@mcclatchyd­c.com Alex Roarty: 202-383-6173, @Alex_Roarty

Florida Republican Sens. Rick Scott and Marco Rubio each said on Thursday that they would vote against a bipartisan gun-control bill in the Senate, opposing the measure even though both men have shown a willingnes­s in the past to support additional gun restrictio­ns.

More than a dozen Republican senators, including Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, have indicated they will vote in favor of the bill, which the Senate is considerin­g after it cleared a key procedural hurdle Thursday. The legislatio­n has unanimous support among all 48 Democratic members and two independen­ts.

Its passage — the bill is expected to be approved by the Democratic-controlled House and signed into law by President Joe Biden — would be a rare moment of bipartisan agreement in Congress, especially on a guns, a contentiou­s issue that for years has deeply split the two parties.

Rubio and Scott said they liked some provisions of the bill but it went too far to restrict gun rights and didn’t do enough to respect due process.

“I promised the people of Florida I would do everything I could to keep our schools and communitie­s safe while protecting their constituti­onal rights,” Rubio said in a statement. “This bill fails that test.”

Rubio did praise the bill for permanentl­y authorizin­g the Federal Clearingho­use on School Safety, a set of federal recommenda­tions for schools to help keep their students safe. He had introduced legislatio­n to do so last year.

In 2018, after a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 people dead and 17 more injured in Parkland, Rubio said he would support tighter restrictio­ns on the sale of some firearms.

Lawmakers from both parties negotiated the gun bill after a school shooting left 21 dead, including 19 students, last month in Uvalde, Texas.

The tragedy, which came just weeks after 10 people were killed in a Buffalo grocery-store shooting in which Black people were specifical­ly targeted, has reignited a national debate about gun-related violence, similar to the one that occurred in 2018 after the Parkland shooting.

That year, then-Florida Gov. Scott signed into law a measure known as the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act, raising the age limit for purchasing firearms from 18 to 21 and increasing funding for mental-health care, among other provisions.

While some Democrats have said the federal bill is modeled after that legislatio­n, Scott rejected that comparison.

“The Senate bill is unacceptab­ly weak on protecting due process & automatica­lly restores gun rights to convicted domestic abusers,”

Scott tweeted. “That’s why I can’t support it.”

Some conservati­ves have criticized a provision that closes the so-called “boyfriend loophole,” which bars people from having a gun if they have been convicted of assault against someone they once had an intimate and serious relationsh­ip with even if he or she didn’t live with the victim.

Scott also said he opposed a provision that would restore the right to own a gun among those convicted of a domestic assault automatica­lly after

five years, calling it “soft on crime.” The right to own a gun, he said, should not be automatica­lly restored.

In remarks to reporters Wednesday, Scott said he thought the congressio­nal negotiatio­ns were too secretive, in contrast to what he said was the more transparen­t way Florida lawmakers settled on their legislatio­n in 2018. And he said such changes were more appropriat­ely done in states rather than the federal government.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | June 8, 2022 ?? Florida U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott said they liked some provisions of the bill but it went too far to restrict gun rights and didn’t do enough to respect due process.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | June 8, 2022 Florida U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott said they liked some provisions of the bill but it went too far to restrict gun rights and didn’t do enough to respect due process.

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