San Diego Union-Tribune

HOUSE OKS BAN ON ASSAULT WEAPONS

Legislatio­n unlikely to get GOP votes to pass in the Senate

- BY ANNIE KARNI & JULIAN E. BARNES Karni and Barnes write for The New York Times.

Responding to a string of mass shootings, a divided House passed a ban on assault weapons Friday, moving over the near-unanimous opposition of Republican­s to reinstate a prohibitio­n that expired nearly two decades ago.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described the measure, which passed 217-213, as a “crucial step in our ongoing fight against the deadly epidemic of gun violence in our nation.” Only two Republican­s joined Democrats in supporting the bill, and five Democrats voted against the measure.

But the legislatio­n — which would make it illegal to sell, manufactur­e, transfer, possess or import assault weapons and large-capacity ammunition-feeding devices — stands no chance of passing in the evenly divided Senate, where such a sweeping gun control measure would not be able to win over the 10 Republican­s it would need to overcome a filibuster.

Still, the vote provided a way for Democrats to demonstrat­e to voters months before the midterm elections that they were trying to address the epidemic of gun violence in America. The action in the House came in the wake of a spate of mass shootings, including one in Uvalde, Texas, where a gunman wielding an AR-15-style weapon killed 19 elementary school students

and two teachers. The vote also gave Democrats another opportunit­y to draw a sharp distinctio­n with Republican­s.

This month, the House passed legislatio­n to ensure access to contracept­ion nationwide, as well as major protection­s for abortion and same-sex marriage. While Democratic senators are hopeful that they will be able to pass the same-sex marriage legislatio­n, almost all Republican­s in Congress are united in their opposition to

the contracept­ion and abortion bills.

Friday’s debate on assault weapons came about a month after the enactment of bipartisan gun safety legislatio­n, a compromise measure to toughen background checks for prospectiv­e buyers younger than 21 that aimed to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people.

That measure omitted stricter gun control measures that Democrats have long demanded and most

Republican­s have opposed as infringeme­nts on the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

“Weapons of war are designed for war,” Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, said Friday, bemoaning that such firearms are “easier for a teenager to get than to buy a beer.”

He dismissed the recently enacted law as a “weak, modest measure.”

Republican­s argued that AR-15-style weapons are popular sporting rifles that

law-abiding citizens use for self-defense and hunting. And they dismissed the assault weapons bill as an attempt by liberals to trample on gun rights while doing nothing to address the root causes of crime.

“Let’s call this for what it is: It’s a gun grab, pure and simple,” said Rep. Guy Reschentha­ler, R-Pa. “This bill is not about public safety. Rather, this is the most severe restrictio­n on the Second Amendment since the passage of the assault weapons ban of 1994.”

Although Friday’s vote united Democrats, the assault weapons ban generated an intense internal debate that exposed party divisions over the issue of law enforcemen­t and crime, a theme that Republican­s have signaled will be a major element of their campaign attacks on Democrats before the midterm elections.

Democrats had originally planned to pair the vote to ban assault weapons with legislatio­n that would provide more funding to local police department­s. Moderate Democrats from conservati­ve-leaning districts argued that passing the police funding would blunt Republican accusation­s that Democrats are soft on crime and bent on defunding the police.

But the police legislatio­n drew criticism from progressiv­es and members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, who insisted that more police accountabi­lity measures should be included. With the House’s August recess set to begin this weekend, Democratic leaders decided to hold a vote only on the assault weapons bill.

Pelosi said Friday that lawmakers would continue to work on the police legislatio­n after returning to Washington later in the summer.

When the House passed the 1994 crime bill, which included the assault weapons ban, 46 Republican­s supported the legislatio­n and 64 Democrats opposed it. The ban expired in 2004 and has never been renewed, and the Republican Party today is united in opposition to such a measure.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described the assault weapons measure, which passed 217-213, as a “crucial step in our ongoing fight against the deadly epidemic of gun violence in our nation.”
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described the assault weapons measure, which passed 217-213, as a “crucial step in our ongoing fight against the deadly epidemic of gun violence in our nation.”

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