U.S. gun control movement pushing
Congress to act: lawmakers
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[March 26, 2018]
By Peter Szekely
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The youth-led U.S. gun
control movement that flexed its public muscle with huge weekend rallies
has already nudged Congress to enact minor firearms changes, but must
remain active if it hopes to win more meaningful regulations, lawmakers
said on Sunday.
The movement that erupted after the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, has generated a
national conversation about gun rights and has chipped away at
legislative gridlock on the issue, they said.
"The activism of these young people is actually changing the equation,"
Senator Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat, said a day after hundreds of
thousands of protesters rallied in Washington.
Tucked into a $1.3 trillion spending bill Congress passed last week were
modest improvements to background checks for gun sales and an end to a
ban on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studying the
causes of gun violence.
"These are two things we could not have done in the past," Kaine said on
CNN's "State of the Union" program. "But the active engagement by young
people convinced Congress we better do something."
The spending bill, which President Donald Trump signed on Friday, also
includes grants to help schools prevent gun violence.
The Trump administration also took a step on Friday to ban the sale of
bump stocks - devices that enable semi-automatic weapons to fire like
machine guns - that helped gunman Stephen Paddock massacre 58 people in
Las Vegas in October.
A key focus of Saturday's march on Washington, which was duplicated in
800 cities across the country and around the world, was an effort to
turn emotion into political activism by registering participants to
vote.
Americans will vote in November on the entire U.S. House of
Representatives and one-third of the Senate.
Gun control advocates have called for universal background checks on
people buying guns, bans on assault-style rifles such as the one used to
kill 17 students and staff in Parkland, and large-capacity ammunition
magazines.
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A protestor holds a sign during a "March For Our Lives"
demonstration demanding gun control in Sacramento, California, U.S.
March 24, 2018. REUTERS/Bob Strong
Senator Mark Warner, another Virginia Democrat, declared in the wake
of the student-led movement that he would now support bans on such
rifles and magazines, which he had voted against in recent years.
"I think it's time to change our positions and re-examine them,"
Warner said on the CBS News "Face the Nation" program.
"I think this time it's going different," Warner said. "I think we
can actually get it done."
To win significant changes, lawmakers said the young gun control
advocates need to maintain their drive in the face of powerful
pro-gun lobbying by the National Rifle Association and those who see
gun ownership as a right protected by the U.S. Constitution.
"If they don't keep it up, those that want no change will just sit
on their hands," Ohio Governor John Kasich, a Republican who
formerly served in Congress, said on CNN.
Two Republican senators, Marco Rubio of Florida and Joni Ernst of
Iowa, said over the weekend that while they supported gun control
advocates' right to protest, they opposed infringing on the
constitutional right to bear arms.
Meanwhile, former Pennsylvania Republican Senator Rick Santorum drew
an angry response on social media for saying on CNN that, instead of
agitating for change, students should "do something about maybe
taking CPR classes" or take other training to respond to school
shooters.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely; Editing by Paul Simao)
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