House of Representatives reignites
gun-control debate with planned vote
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[July 01, 2016]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives, under mounting
pressure to advance gun-control legislation, will vote next week on a
measure to keep guns out of the hands of people on government terrorism
watch lists.
Republican and gun lobby sources said the legislation, due to be
introduced as part of a terrorism package, was likely to be a
National Rifle Association-backed bill brought by Representative Lee
Zeldin of New York as the companion to a Senate Republican measure
from Senator John Cornyn of Texas.
House Democrats, who last week staged a 25-hour sit-in on the House
floor to push for gun control after the June 12 mass shooting in
Orlando, condemned the Cornyn-Zeldin measure as the handiwork of the
NRA. Senate Democrats blocked the same legislation last week.
"House Democrats will keep up our efforts to push for the majority
to allow a vote on gun violence legislation, but bringing up a bill
authored by the NRA just isn't going to cut it," said Drew Hammill,
an aide to House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. The NRA denied
writing the legislation.
House Speaker Paul Ryan announced the plan in a conference call with
lawmakers. Republican leadership aides declined to provide details.
One said the package was still being negotiated.
 After the Orlando, Florida, shooting that killed 49 people and
wounded 53 more at a gay nightclub [nL1N19L1WH], gun-control
proponents ratcheted up pressure for meaningful legislation.
"We are going to get something done this year, I predict," Senate
Democratic leader Harry Reid told reporters. "I think we’re going to
take a bite out of the NRA."
Reid said he was hopeful for a bill introduced by Republican Senator
Susan Collins of Maine, and a bipartisan House companion bill backed
by Republicans including Representative Carlos Curbelo of Florida,
to prevent gun sales to anyone on the government's "No Fly List" for
terrorism suspects or the "Selectee List" for extra airport
screening.
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House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) speaks about the House Democrats'
sit-in over gun-control laws, during a news conference on Capitol
Hill in Washington, U.S., June 23, 2016. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
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Before Thursday's announcement, Representative Bob Dold of Illinois,
a Republican backer of the Collins-Curbelo bill, urged Ryan and
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy to opt for the bipartisan
measure, according to a Dold aide.
But hopes for a vote on that measure could be dashed if House
Republicans move first on the Cornyn-Zeldin bill, which would allow
party leaders to say they had acted on gun control.
"It would really be a sharp blow," said Representative Scott Rigell,
a Virginia Republican and NRA member who supports the
Collins-Curbelo measure.
The NRA-backed measure would give officials three days to decide
whether a gun sale should be blocked. Democrats argue the timetable
is insufficient and say the government would have to persuade a
court that a would-be buyer "has committed or will commit an act of
terrorism" before it could block a gun sale.
Under the Collins-Curbelo bills, a court would have 14 days to
decide on appeals.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Additional reporting by Richard Cowan
and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and David Gregorio)
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