In
familiar ritual, Obama consoles families from Oregon mass shooting
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[October 10, 2015]
By Jeff Mason and Courtney Sherwood
ROSEBURG, Ore. (Reuters) - President
Barack Obama, in a ritual that has become both familiar and frustrating
to him, traveled to Oregon on Friday to console families of the victims
of a community college shooting that once again sparked a push for U.S.
gun reform.
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The president, a Democrat who tried but failed to tighten firearms
laws after previous mass shootings, arrived in a community where
support for gun rights remains strong despite the deaths of 10
people, including the gunman, in the deadliest massacre on U.S. soil
in two years.
As his motorcade drove into town, supporters and protesters lined
the streets with signs such as "Not giving up our rights," "Please
leave us in peace" and "Gun-free zones are for sitting ducks."
Obama met privately for about an hour with the families at a local
high school.
Speaking to reporters afterwards, he said he had "strong feelings"
about the issue of gun control and said the country needed to come
together to prevent such shootings from happening in the future. But
he did not show the same anger he has previously, saying the day was
about the families.
"Obviously, in moments like these, words aren't going to bring their
loved ones back," he said.
"When you talk to these families, you’re reminded that this could be
happening to your child, or your mom, or your dad, or your relative,
or your friend. And so we're going to have to come together as a
country to see how we can prevent these issues from taking place."
Last week the president furiously denounced the killings as a
symptom of a political choice by U.S. lawmakers to bow to pressure
from the powerful National Rifle Association lobby group instead of
reforming gun laws.
Obama has made regular trips to funerals and memorial services for
victims of mass shootings during the past seven years as president.
He has said the December 2012 shooting at the Sandy Hook elementary
school in Newtown, Connecticut, was his toughest day as president.
His trip came on the same day as another school shooting, this one
in Arizona, where an 18-year-old student killed a classmate and
wounded three other students on a university campus.
About 250 people gathered in Roseburg, some driving for hours, to
protest Obama's visit on Friday.
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"The way things played out with Sandy Hook and the president
parading those families across the country to take away my gun
rights - that is why I'm here," said Jason Harju, 40, who was
wearing a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun on his belt and a
sweatshirt that said "OREGUN."
"He's using us to politicize this shooting. He's trying to get guns
taken away," said Willie Windon, 56, a retired U.S. Army veteran.
Obama has tasked White House lawyers and advisers to look for new
ways he could use his executive powers to enforce existing gun
regulations.
One of those options is a regulatory change to require more dealers
to get a license to sell guns, which would lead to more background
checks on buyers - an action that Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton said she would take if elected in November 2016.
The White House had drafted a proposal on that issue in 2013, but
was concerned it could be challenged in court and would be hard to
enforce.
But officials are now hopeful that they can find a way to advance
the plan, a White House official said on Friday.
(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton in Washington; Editing by
James Dalgleish and Lisa Shumaker)
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