Republicans push back on Democratic
gun-control efforts
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[July 06, 2016]
By David Morgan and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. congressional
Republicans on Tuesday resisted Democratic demands for a vote on
gun-control measures and warned that some could face punishment for an
unusual sit-in last month that tied up the House of Representatives for
25 hours.
With Democrats already rejecting a Republican gun bill and warning
of further protests, the Republican-controlled House appeared to be
heading for renewed discord over gun restrictions following the June
12 mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.
House Speaker Paul Ryan met for about 30 minutes on Tuesday with two
Democrats who led the sit-in: Representatives John Lewis of Georgia
and John Larson of Connecticut. The Democrats said they would ask
Ryan for a vote on two Democratic-backed measures but left the
meeting without speaking to reporters.
"The path ahead ... will be discussed and determined by the majority
in the coming days," Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong said later in a
statement.
The measures sought by Democrats would expand background checks for
gun purchases and allow the government to block gun sales to
suspected extremists without first getting a judge's approval.
Hours before the meeting, Ryan suggested a vote on the Democratic
legislation was unlikely, telling a Milwaukee radio station: "The
last thing we are going to do is surrender the floor over to these
kinds of tactics when we know it's going to compromise the
constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens."
House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy said separately that he and
Ryan would meet this week with the chamber's top enforcement
official to talk about reports that some Democrats at the June 22-23
sit-in engaged in "intimidation" while carrying out their protest.
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Handguns are seen for sale in a display case at Metro Shooting
Supplies in Bridgeton, Missouri, November 13, 2014. REUTERS/Jim
Young
Ryan has announced that the House will vote this week on a measure
intended to keep guns out of the hands of people the government
suspects of involvement in violent extremism. But Democrats say the
legislation is inadequate because authorities would have only three
days to convince a judge that a gun sale should be blocked.
"Ninety-one people die each day from gun violence in this country
and the best Speaker Ryan can muster is a meaningless bill," said
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi aide Drew Hammill.
Six people who said they lost family and loved ones to gun violence
were arrested in the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, after a protest
demanding Congress reject the Ryan measure and vote on the
Democratic measures.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by James Dalgleish and Peter
Cooney)
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