U.S. Senate passes gun safety bill as Supreme Court knocks down handgun
limits
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[June 24, 2022]
By David Morgan, Andrew Chung and Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A bipartisan package
of modest gun safety measures passed the U.S. Senate late on Thursday
even as the Supreme Court broadly expanded gun rights by ruling
Americans have a constitutional right to carry handguns in public for
self-defense.
The landmark court ruling and Senate action on gun safety illustrate the
deep divide over firearms in the United States, weeks after mass
shootings in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York, killed more than 30
people, including 19 children.
The Senate bill, approved in a 65-33 vote, is the first significant gun
control legislation to pass in three decades, in a country with the
highest gun ownership per capita in the world and the highest number of
mass shootings annually among wealthy nations.
"This bipartisan legislation will help protect Americans. Kids in
schools and communities will be safer because of it," President Joe
Biden said following the vote. "The House of Representatives should
promptly vote on this bipartisan bill and send it to my desk."
The bill, which supporters say will save lives, is modest - its most
important restraint on gun ownership would tighten background checks for
would-be gun purchasers convicted of domestic violence or significant
crimes as juveniles.
Republicans refused to compromise on more sweeping gun control measures
favored by Democrats including Biden, such as a ban on assault-style
rifles or high-capacity magazines.
"This is not a cure-all for the ways gun violence affects our nation,
but it is a long overdue step in the right direction," Democratic Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on the floor ahead of the vote.
The Supreme Court ruling earlier on Thursday, pushed through by its
conservative majority, struck down New York state's limits on carrying
concealed handguns outside the home.
The court found that the law, enacted in 1913, violated a person's right
to "keep and bear arms" under the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment.
In the Senate vote late on Thursday, 15 Republicans joined all 50
Democrats in voting for the bill.
Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi applauded the bill's passage and
said in a statement it would advance in the House on Friday, with a vote
coming as soon as possible.
House Republicans had instructed their members to vote against the bill,
although since the chamber is controlled by Democrats their support was
not needed for the bill's passage.
Biden will sign the bill into law.
The Senate action came weeks after an impassioned speech by Biden, in
which he declared "enough" of gun violence and urged lawmakers to act.
Polls show that a majority of Americans support some new limits on
firearms, demands that typically rise following mass shootings like
those that occurred in Texas and New York.
Democrats warned that the Supreme Court ruling on Thursday could have
dire consequences for gun safety nationwide.
"The Supreme Court got the ruling wrong," Senator Chris Murphy, the lead
Democratic negotiator on the gun safety legislation, said in an
interview.
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U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) speaks to reporters
following the Senate Democrats weekly policy lunch at the U.S.
Capitol in Washington, U.S., June 22, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
"I'm deeply worried about the court's willingness to
take away from elected bodies the ability to protect our
constituents and that has real grave implications for the safety of
our country," said Murphy, whose home state of Connecticut, where 26
people were killed in a 2012 shooting at an elementary school.
Conservatives defend a broad reading of the Second
Amendment, which they say limits most new restrictions on gun
purchases.
The Senate's 80-page Bipartisan Safer Communities Act would
encourage states to keep guns out of the hands of those deemed to be
dangerous and tighten background checks for would-be gun buyers
convicted of domestic violence or significant crimes as juveniles.
More than 20,800 people have been killed in gun violence in the
United States in 2022, including through homicide and suicide,
according to the Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit research group.
'MONUMENTAL WIN'
The Supreme Court ruling, authored by conservative Justice Clarence
Thomas, declared that the Constitution protects "an individual's
right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home."
"This is a monumental win for NRA members and for gun owners across
the country," said Jason Ouimet, executive director of the National
Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action, in a statement.
"This ruling opens the door to rightly change the law in the seven
remaining states that still don't recognize the right to carry a
firearm for personal protection."
In the Senate, Republican backers of the new gun safety bill said
that the measure does not erode the rights of law-abiding gun
owners, who are among their most ardent constituents.
"It does not so much as touch the rights of the overwhelming
majority of American gun owners, who are law-abiding citizens of
sound mind," Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said, who
backs the legislation.
The bill provides funding to help states adopt "red flag" laws to
keep firearms out of the hands of those deemed a danger to
themselves or others. It would also fund alternative intervention
measures in state where red flag laws are opposed and provide for
enhanced school security.
It closes the "boyfriend loophole" by denying gun purchases to those
convicted of abusing intimate partners in dating relationships,
although if they have no further convictions or penalties they will
be allowed to purchase again.
It also allows states to add juvenile criminal and mental health
records to national background check databases.
Senator John Cornyn, the lead Republican negotiator on the bill, was
booed last week as he discussed its contents during a speech before
a Republican Party convention in his home state of Texas.
(Reporting by David Morgan, Andrew Chung and Moira Warburton;
additional reporting by Rose Horowitch, Katharine Jackson, Richard
Cowan and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell and
Jonathan Oatis)
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