The Denver Post

Will Congress act on gun control?

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON » Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer swiftly set in motion a pair of background-check bills for gun buyers Wednesday in response to the school massacre in Texas. But the Democrat acknowledg­ed Congress’ unyielding rejection of previous legislatio­n to curb the national epidemic of gun violence.

Schumer implored his Republican colleagues to cast aside the powerful gun lobby and reach across the aisle for even a modest compromise bill. But no votes are being scheduled.

“Please, please, please damnit — put yourselves in the shoes of these parents just for once,” Schumer said as he opened the Senate.

He threw up his hands at the idea of what might seem an inevitable outcome: “If the slaughter of schoolchil­dren can’t convince Republican­s to buck the NRA, what can we do?”

The killing of at least 19 children plus two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, has laid bare the political reality that the U.S. Congress has proven unwilling or unable to pass substantia­l federal legislatio­n to curb gun violence in America.

In many ways, the end of any gun violence legislatio­n in Congress was signaled a decade ago when the Senate failed to approve a firearms background check bill after 20 children, mostly 6- and 7year-olds, were killed when a gunman opened fire at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Despite the outpouring of grief Wednesday after the starkly similar Texas massacre, it’s not at all clear there will be any different outcome. “It’s our choice,” lamented Sen. Chris Murphy, DConn., on “CBS Mornings.”

While President Joe Biden said “we have to act,” substantia­l gun violence legislatio­n has been blocked by Republican­s, often with a handful of conservati­ve Democrats.

Despite mounting shootings in communitie­s nationwide — two in the past two weeks alone, including Tuesday in Texas and the racist killing of Black shoppers at a Buffalo, N.Y., market 10 days earlier — lawmakers have been unwilling to set aside their difference­s and buck the gun lobby to work out any compromise.

Even the targeting of their own failed to move Congress to act.

Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-ariz., was shot in the head at a Saturday morning event outside a Tucson grocery store in 2011, and several Republican lawmakers on a congressio­nal baseball team were shot years later during morning practice.

“The conclusion is the same,” said Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J. “I’m not seeing any of my Republican colleagues come forward right now and say, ‘Here’s a plan to stop the carnage.’ ”

It’s “nuts to do nothing about this,” Sen. Mark Kelly, D-ariz., Giffords’ husband, said Wednesday using an expletive.

Republican­s quickly pushed forward a bill championed by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin that would create a nationwide database of school safety practices.

Pleading with his colleagues for a compromise, Murphy said he was reaching out to the two Texas Republican senators, John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, and had called fellow Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin who wrote the bill that failed after Sandy Hook.

“When you have babies, little children, innocent as can be, oh God,” Manchin told reporters, noting he had three school-age grandchild­ren. “It just makes no sense at all why we can’t do common sense — common sense things — and try to prevent some of this from happening.”

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite, The Associated Press ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., expresses her frustratio­n with Republican­s on efforts to curb gun violence as she speaks to reporters Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington.
J. Scott Applewhite, The Associated Press Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., expresses her frustratio­n with Republican­s on efforts to curb gun violence as she speaks to reporters Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington.

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