Consoling Orlando victims, Obama recasts
somber role
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[June 16, 2016]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Reprising his
frequent role of "consoler in chief," President Barack Obama will fly to
Orlando on Thursday to meet with survivors of the massacre at a gay
nightclub and families of some of the 49 people killed.
The White House said Obama's visit to the Florida city where Omar
Mateen pledged allegiance to Islamic State during a three-hour
rampage through the Pulse nightclub, was not about the gunman but
comforting the victims of the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S.
history.
"This will be, I think, an emotional trip," White House spokesman
Josh Earnest told reporters, saying Obama would offer condolences on
behalf of the nation.
"The president recognizes that he is a symbol for the rest of the
country. But it would be impossible for him not to be personally
affected by these kinds of conversations," Earnest said.
A long list of mass shootings has marked Obama's 7-1/2 years in the
White House.
Obama most recently met with grieving families in December in San
Bernardino, California, after a married couple inspired by Islamic
State killed 14 people. He has visited with victims of mass
shootings in Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Washington, D.C., and South
Carolina.
"Somehow this has become routine," he said last October before
meeting privately with victims of a shooting at an Oregon community
college where nine people were killed.
"This is a political choice that we make, to allow this to happen
every few months in America," he said.
Obama has often said his toughest time as president came after a
gunman killed 20 children and six adults at an elementary school in
Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012.
"Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad," Obama said in
January, tears rolling down his cheek, as he launched a push to make
gun control an issue in the Nov. 8 election to succeed him.
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President Barack Obama delivers a statement after a meeting with his
national security team at the Treasury Department in Washington,
U.S., June 14, 2016. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
After Newtown, Obama proposed more background checks for gun sales
and pushed to ban more types of military-style assault weapons - a
tall order in a country where the constitutional right to own guns
is fiercely defended.
He failed to convince enough lawmakers to back the restrictions, and
blamed them for being in thrall to the National Rifle Association,
the powerful U.S. gun lobby.
The Florida shooting has aroused new debate on gun purchases in the
United States, after it emerged that Mateen was legally able to buy
an assault rifle even though the FBI had investigated him in the
past for possible ties to Islamist militant groups.
Obama said Sunday's massacre was "a further reminder of how easy it
is for someone to get their hands on a weapon that lets them shoot
people in a school, or in a house of worship, or a movie theater, or
in a nightclub."
"We have to make it harder for people who want to kill Americans to
get their hands on weapons of war that let them kill dozens of
innocents," he said on Tuesday.
(Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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