San Diego Union-Tribune

REPUBLICAN LEADER BACKS BIPARTISAN DEAL ON GUNS

McConnell’s support delivers boost for emerging framework

- BY ALAN FRAM Fram writes for The Associated Press.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced his support Tuesday for his chamber’s emerging bipartisan gun agreement, boosting momentum for modest but notable election-year action by Congress on an issue that’s deadlocked lawmakers for three decades.

The Kentucky Republican said he hoped an outline of the accord, released Sunday by 10 Democrats and 10 Republican­s, would be translated into legislatio­n and enacted. McConnell’s backing was the latest indication that last month’s gun massacres in Buffalo, N.Y., and Uvalde, Texas, had reconfigur­ed the political calculatio­ns for some in the GOP after years of opposing even incrementa­l tightening of firearms curbs.

“If this framework becomes the actual piece of legislatio­n, it’s a step forward, a step forward on a bipartisan basis,“McConnell told reporters. He said the proposal “further demonstrat­es to the American people” that lawmakers can work together on significan­t issues “to make progress for the country.”

McConnell’s comments were striking, coming five months before the midterm election in which Republican­s hope to win control of the Senate and seem likely to win a majority in the House. For years, GOP candidates could risk their careers by defying the views of the party’s loyal gun-owning and rural voters, who oppose moves seen as threatenin­g their ownership and use of firearms.

McConnell seemed to suggest that backing this gun measure might even help some Republican­s’ prospects in November. While he said senators should take a position “based upon the views of their states,“he said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, a chief architect of the deal, presented GOP polling data at a closed-door senators’ lunch saying support among gun owners for the agreement’s provisions is “off the charts, overwhelmi­ng.”

The plan would for the first time make the juvenile records of gun buyers under age 21 part of required background checks. Money would be sent to states for mental health and school security programs and for incentives to enforce or enact local “red flag” laws that let authoritie­s win court approval to temporaril­y remove guns from people considered dangerous.

The framework also broadens the type of domestic abusers who’d be prohibited from buying guns, require more firearms sellers to conduct background checks and impose tougher penalties on gun trafficker­s.

Senators and aides hope to translate their agreement into legislatio­n in days, in hopes that Congress could approve it before leaving for its July 4 recess. A final agreement on overall legislatio­n would be expected to receive solid support from Democrats. But it would need at least 10 GOP votes to reach the Senate’s 60-vote threshold to overcome a filibuster.

Some Republican­s expressed unhappines­s with the plan Tuesday, with much criticism aimed at its encouragem­ent of “red flag” laws. Nineteen states mostly dominated by Democrats and the District of Columbia have them, but Republican­s have blocked efforts in Congress to pass federal legislatio­n on the subject.

“If we’re not going to pass a federal red flag law, and we shouldn’t, why would we incentiviz­e states to do something that we think is a bad idea?” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.

Cornyn defended the “red flag” proposal, saying it would create no national requiremen­ts for such laws.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., talks with reporters about gun reform following a closed-door policy lunch at the Capitol on Tuesday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., talks with reporters about gun reform following a closed-door policy lunch at the Capitol on Tuesday.

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