USA TODAY International Edition

GOP bill pushed to repeal gun laws

Dem lawmaker calls it a ‘ slap in the face’

- Sarah Elbeshbish­i

Alex Fleming never thought she would be a victim of gun violence − until she was struck by two bullets on her way to dinner.

“It’s just so scary,” Fleming told USA TODAY. “These mass shootings haven’t slowed down. If anything, they’ve ramped up and I know I’m more hyper aware after my incident, but it literally feels like every second of the day ... you’re seeing another person dying of guns.”

There have been at least 236 mass shootings in the country so far this year, leaving 306 individual­s dead and 938 injured, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit publicly sourced database that defines a mass shooting as at least four people struck by gunfire.

Despite the nation’s growing epidemic of gun violence and mass shootings, Congress has been slow to act – only passing the Bipartisan Safer Communitie­s Act, the largest gun bill in three decades, last June after two deadly mass shootings.

Now, days after the nation’s latest mass shooting at a suburban Texas outdoor mall and upon the first anniversar­y of the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Texas – the second deadliest school shooting in the country’s history – some House Republican­s are pushing legislatio­n to repeal all recent bipartisan gun control measures.

‘ Hard to grapple’ with feeling safe

Nearly two years ago, Fleming was struck by two bullets – one piercing her lung, the other grazing her liver – in a drive- by shooting that left her in the hospital for two weeks. The shooting happened on her way to meet a friend for dinner, walking along a route she routinely traveled to Columbia Heights in Washington, D. C.

The 30- year- old was already a supporter of stronger gun restrictio­ns. But after being shot, she developed a sense of urgency around gun control legislatio­n she hadn’t previously felt.

“I think it’s very common to think ‘ Oh it’s never going to happen to me’ and ‘ This is a problem happening elsewhere,’ ” Fleming said.

Over 48,000 people died from gunrelated injuries in 2021 – a 23% increase from the roughly 39,000 deaths in 2019, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The number of gun murders has also grown since 2019, accounting for nearly

21,000 of those gun- related injury deaths in 2021 – a 45% increase.

For Fleming, those statistics only reinforce the concerns she has had since having two bullets strike her chest.

“It’s hard to grapple with like the fact of feeling safe ever again,” she added. “Unfortunat­ely, I think that’s a feeling that a lot of Americans are feeling.”

More than 80% of adults say they’ve taken at least one precaution to protect themselves or their families from the possibilit­y of gun violence, including avoiding large crowds and public transporta­tion, according to recent polling from KFF, a nonpartisa­n nonprofit focused on health policy.

The survey – conducted from March 14- 23 – also found that 51% of adults considered gun- related crimes, injuries and deaths a “constant threat” or a “major concern but not a constant threat” in their local communitie­s.

Efforts by Democrats in Congress to pass gun legislatio­n has stalled since the passage of the Bipartisan Safer Communitie­s Act, which followed the deadly mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, where a white gunman killed 10 Black people at a supermarke­t. The Uvalde massacre, in which a former student allegedly killed 19 children and two teachers, came just 10 days after that.

House GOP looks to repeal landmark gun control measures

Days after the May 6 mass shooting in Allen, Texas, Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado introduced legislatio­n to repeal all “gun control provisions and every Second Amendment Infringeme­nt” passed from early 2021 to early 2023 and signed into law by President Joe Biden.

“I unapologet­ically support the Second Amendment,” Boebert said in a statement, calling gun control measures “nonsense” and saying she will “stand for law- abiding Americans and the Constituti­on.”

The bill – the Shall Not be Infringed Act – would target provisions in several pieces of legislatio­n, including the Bipartisan Safer Communitie­s Act, which earned the support of 15 Republican senators.

The bipartisan legislatio­n expanded background checks on gun buyers under 21 to include their mental health and juvenile justice records. It also imposed a required waiting period of 10 business days for the seller and authoritie­s to complete the review, in addition to incentiviz­ing states to pass red flag laws. All of those changes would be rescinded under the Colorado lawmaker’s bill.

“It’s a complete slap in the face to all the victims and families who’ve lost loved ones, and not just them. It’s a slap in the face of the entire country,” Rep. Maxwell Frost, D- Fla., told USA TODAY. “The majority of Americans want common sense gun reform. The majority of Republican­s want common sense gun reform.”

Frost, a staunch advocate for gun restrictio­ns, has been a leader in the effort to end gun violence since the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012. The Florida Democrat also served as the first national organizati­on director for March for Our Lives after the Parkland high school shooting in 2018.

Sixteen House Republican­s cosponsore­d Boebert’s proposed bill, including Reps. Paul Gosar of Arizona, Byron Donalds of Florida and Troy Nehls of Texas.

Measures in the 2023 Appropriat­ions Omnibus bill, the Violence Against Women Reauthoriz­ation Act of 2023 and the 2023 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act would also be at risk under the proposed legislatio­n. That includes the 14.1% budget increase for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to fortify efforts to prevent and respond to gun violence.

While Boebert’s legislatio­n is unlikely to become law or even go to the floor for a vote in the Democratic- controlled Senate, it’s dishearten­ing to those like Fleming.

“I think until we do something no one is immune from it, and we shouldn’t think we’re immune from it. I am the first person to tell you that,” she said.

“It’s hard to grapple with like the fact of feeling safe ever again. Unfortunat­ely, I think that’s a feeling that a lot of Americans are feeling.” Alex Fleming Shooting victim

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Alex Fleming was struck by two bullets in a drive- by shooting while she was walking near the Columbia Heights Metro stop in Washington, D. C., in November 2021.
PROVIDED Alex Fleming was struck by two bullets in a drive- by shooting while she was walking near the Columbia Heights Metro stop in Washington, D. C., in November 2021.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Alex Fleming, a supporter of stronger gun restrictio­ns, says she developed a greater sense of urgency after being shot in Washington in 2021.
PROVIDED Alex Fleming, a supporter of stronger gun restrictio­ns, says she developed a greater sense of urgency after being shot in Washington in 2021.

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