Background checks and bump stock bans: 2020 Democrats on gun control
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[January 29, 2020]
By Sharon Bernstein and Ginger Gibson
(Reuters) - With more than 15,000 people
killed by gun violence in the United States last year - not counting
suicides - Democrats running for their party's presidential nomination
are pointing to inaction in Washington as evidence they should be chosen
to run against Republican President Donald Trump.
Here is a look at gun control positions taken by Trump and the Democrats
vying to unseat him.
DONALD TRUMP
In a speech shortly after two mass shootings last summer, Trump proposed
tighter monitoring of the internet, mental health reform and wider use
of the death penalty as a response to the shootings. He suggested he
might support background checks for gun purchases.
But on Jan. 20, in advance of a Virginia rally by gun enthusiasts and
militia members who oppose background checks for gun purchasers and
other firearms restrictions that are being considered in the state,
Trump criticized the reforms on Twitter.
“Your 2nd Amendment is under very serious attack in the Great
Commonwealth of Virginia,” Trump wrote.
JOE BIDEN
Biden, who served as vice president under Democratic President Barack
Obama from 2009-2017, supports renewing an expired assault weapons ban
imposed in the 1990s. He has also called for a federal gun buyback
program to reduce the number of weapons on the street.
Like other Democratic candidates, Biden supports universal background
checks for gun sales. He would ban those convicted of hate crimes from
owning or buying guns.
In addition to more background checks, Biden advocates so-called "smart
guns" that require owners' biometrics to pull the trigger.
BERNIE SANDERS
Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont, supports universal background
checks, a ban on the sale and distribution of assault weapons, a
crackdown on straw purchases of guns for criminals, and the prohibition
of high-capacity ammunition magazines.
He also supports so-called red flag laws, under which a court could take
away guns from people deemed by a judge to be likely to hurt others with
firearms, including stalkers and those accused of domestic abuse. He
would ban the 3-D printing of firearms and bump stocks, which speed up
the firing of semi-automatic weapons.
Sanders has called on the Republican-controlled Senate to vote on a bill
requiring a background check on every gun sale and transfer, which
passed the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives last year.
ELIZABETH WARREN
Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, has promised to send
comprehensive gun violence prevention legislation to Congress within her
first 100 days in office. She backs requiring universal background
checks for gun purchasers, reporting mass purchases of firearms and
raising the minimum age to own a gun to 18.
She says she would investigate the finances of the powerful gun rights
lobbying organization, the National Rifle Association, and revoke
licenses for gun dealers who make sales that do not comply with federal
laws. She would expand rules meant to prevent gun violence by those
suspected of domestic abuse.
Warren supports reinstating the federal assault weapons ban and creating
a federal licensing system that requires gun owners to register their
firearms.
PETE BUTTIGIEG
The former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Buttigieg supports universal
background checks, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines,
and red flag laws that disarm domestic abusers and others ruled by a
judge to be at high risk of harming others with a gun.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
is pursued by reporters after attending the Senate impeachment trial
of U.S. President Donald Trump at the U.S. Capitol in Washington,
U.S., January 28, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Buttigieg would require people to notify law enforcement if their
guns are lost or stolen. Like several of his rivals, Buttigieg
supports giving the FBI longer than the current three days to
conduct a background check. He would close the "boyfriend loophole"
by expanding a law restricting gun purchases by perpetrators of
spousal abuse and would prohibit guns made without serial numbers or
on 3D printers.
AMY KLOBUCHAR
Klobuchar, a U.S. senator from Minnesota, backs universal background
checks, banning bump stocks that allow weapons to fire 700 rounds
per minute and banning high-capacity magazines that hold more than
10 rounds of ammunition.
She would fight for an assault weapons ban while more immediately
raising the minimum age to buy such weapons from 18 to 21. She would
prevent people with severe mental illness from acquiring guns and
establish a waiting period for sales of handguns and assault rifles.
She would prohibit the online publication of computer codes used for
3-D printing of firearms.
She authored legislation, stalled in the Republican-controlled
Senate, to close the so-called "boyfriend loophole."
MICHAEL BLOOMBERG
The billionaire former mayor of New York has long backed stricter
firearms laws, co-founding or championing gun control groups,
including Mayors Against Illegal Guns, Moms Demand Action and
Everytown for Gun Safety. He spent $110 million backing gun safety
candidates in the 2018 election cycle, his campaign website says.
Bloomberg backs universal background checks, reinstating the federal
assault weapons ban and prohibiting the sale of high-capacity
magazines. He would raise the age to legally purchase handguns and
semi-automatic weapons to 21 and temporarily ban gun possession by
people convicted of assault and other violent crimes.
He would ban all guns at schools, colleges and universities except
for those used by law enforcement. He would also extend beyond
spouses a law meant to protect victims of domestic abuse.
ANDREW YANG
Yang, a businessman, has backed comprehensive gun control measures
including an assault weapon ban and prohibiting high-capacity
magazines.
He supports creating a tax credit to incentivize upgrading guns to
use technology, like biological indicators, to unlock the firearm.
Yang believes the use of guns to commit suicide is also an issue to
be addressed.
TOM STEYER
The billionaire progressive activist and former hedge fund manager
from San Francisco supports universal background checks, waiting
periods for gun purchases, and bans on assault weapons,
high-capacity magazines and bump stocks.
He supports laws that allow courts to temporarily prohibit people
likely to threaten others with guns from owning them.
Steyer calls for new laws closing loopholes in laws meant to prevent
stalkers and domestic abusers from gaining access to guns. He says
he would work with states to establish "high standards" for those
seeking permission to carry concealed weapons in public.
Steyer would also ban the use of 3-D printers to make homemade guns.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein and Ginger Gibson; Additional
reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Jonathan
Oatis)
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