The Mercury News

Gun control fails in Senate

As parties stake out political turf, lawmakers vote down four proposals, including Feinstein’s

- By Karoun Demirjian

WASHINGTON — The Senate on Monday voted down four competing gun control proposals, allowing Democrats and Republican­s to stake out political turf around a controvers­ial, emotional issue that promises to play big in a campaign year.

The votes, which fell mostly along party lines, came as the debate over gun laws has been reinvigora­ted following the recent mass shootings at an Orlando, Florida, nightclub popular with the gay community.

Despite both parties presenting proposals to tighten certain aspects of gun laws, attempts to craft any compromise ran aground last week leading to Monday’s series of votes that served as a way for both sides to send political messages.

Variations of all four proposals considered Monday already failed to pass the Senate in December following the deadly mass shooting at the hands of Islamic State sympathize­rs in San Bernardino.

Democrats charged that Monday’s votes fit a pattern of Republican­s giving in to the demands of the National Rifle

Associatio­n following tragic shooting incidents, despite polls showing support for stricter gun laws.

“Senate Republican­s ought to be embarrasse­d, but they’re not, because the NRA is happy,” Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, said.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, accused Democrats of pushing a “partisan agenda.”

In the week since the most recent mass shooting, both Democrats and Republican­s have repeatedly stated that terrorists should not be able to purchase guns.

But there are substantiv­e difference­s between the proposals offered by both sides — all of which required 60 votes to advance in the Senate.

The Senate voted 47 to 53 to reject a measure from Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCaliforni­a, to let the attorney general deny firearms and explosives to any suspected terrorists. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota was the sole Democrat to vote against the measure, while Republican Sens. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Mark Kirk of Illinois, both of whom face tough re-election contests, voted for it.

The Senate, on a 53 to 47 vote, also rejected a Republican alternativ­e from Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, that would allow authoritie­s to delay a gun sale to a terrorism suspect for three days or longer if a judge ruled during that time that there is probable cause to deny the firearm outright.

Two Democrats, Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Joe Donnelly of Indiana, backed the measure. But three Republican­s — Sens. Jeff Flake of Arizona, Kirk and Susan Collins of Maine — voted against Cornyn’s amendment.

Both provisions contained language to alert authoritie­s if anyone who has been on a terror watch list in the last five years tries to buy a gun. Such a provision might not have prevented the Orlando shooter from buying the weapons he used in the nightclub massacre, but it would have let authoritie­s know when he purchased the firearms.

Republican­s argued Feinstein’s proposal doesn’t do enough to protect against situations where someone mistakenly on a terror watch list, or mistakenly suspected of links to terror groups, would be denied their Second Amendment rights.

Democrats countered that the time limitation­s in Cornyn’s alternativ­e would make it functional­ly impossible to actually prevent suspicious individual­s from purchasing firearms.

Ayotte was working with Collins over the last week to try to come up with a compromise proposal. That proposal would prevent people on two subsets of the FBI’s database of suspected terrorists — the “No Fly List” and the “Selectee List” — from buying guns and alert the FBI if someone on those lists in the previous five years tried to purchase weapons.

But Democrats said that Collins’ proposal was too narrow and would allow too many potential terrorists to fall through the cracks.

The Senate also rejected, on a 44 to 56 vote, a measure from Sens. Chris Murphy, D-Connecticu­t, Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, and Charles Schumer, D-New York, that would expand background checks for anyone trying to purchase a firearm, including at a gun show or online.

It was a more expansive version of a compromise measure from Sens. Manchin and Pat Toomey, RPennsylva­nia, that sought to expand background checks in 2013 after the mass shooting at the Sandy Hook school in Newtown, Connecticu­t. Their proposal never gained the needed support.

Republican­s objected to the breadth of the Murphy-Booker-Schumer proposal, which would require a background check for almost any sale or transfer of a firearm.

Instead, Republican­s backed an alternativ­e from Sen. Charles Grassley, RIowa, that would increase funding for the government to run background checks without expanding them. It failed on a 53 to 47 vote.

Last week, Democrats took their frustratio­ns to the Senate floor in a nearly 15-hour filibuster, led by Murphy, in which they demanded votes on their two proposals.

They credited the display with bringing about Monday’s votes. Republican leaders, meanwhile, derided them for staging a “campaign talk-athon” on the Senate floor that only slowed things down.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Erica Smegielski, daughter of slain Sandy Hook principal Dawn Hochsprung, is comforted by Sen. Christophe­r Murphy, D-Conn., after Senate votes.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES Erica Smegielski, daughter of slain Sandy Hook principal Dawn Hochsprung, is comforted by Sen. Christophe­r Murphy, D-Conn., after Senate votes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States