Rome News-Tribune

Private sales emerge as obstacle to Senate action on gun legislatio­n

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

Democrats in Congress are trying to pass the first major gun control legislatio­n in more than two decades with the support of President Joe Biden, who said Thursday that it is “long past time” to do so. But they are confrontin­g a potentiall­y insurmount­able question over what rules should govern private sales and transfers, including those between friends and extended family, as they seek Republican votes.

A bipartisan Senate compromise that was narrowly

WASHINGTON —

defeated eight years ago was focused on expanding checks to sales at gun shows and on the internet. But many Democrats and gun control advocates now want almost all sales and transfers to face a mandatory review, alienating Republican­s who say extending the requiremen­ts would trample Second Amendment rights.

The dispute has been one of several hurdles in the renewed push for gun-control legislatio­n, despite wide support for extending the checks. A small group of senators have engaged in tentative talks in the wake of recent mass shootings in Atlanta and Colorado, hoping to build on bipartisan proposals from the past. But support from at least 10 Republican­s will be needed to get a bill through the Senate, and most are intractabl­y opposed.

Connecticu­t Sen. Chris Murphy, the lead Democratic negotiator on guns, said he’s been on the phone with Republican colleagues every day “making the case, cajoling, asking my friends to keep an open mind.” In an interview with The Associated Press, he said he’d discussed the negotiatio­ns personally with Biden on Thursday and that “he’s ready and willing to get more involved” in the talks.

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