After Trump shooting, his supporters still fiercely oppose gun reforms
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[July 16, 2024]
By Tim Reid and Helen Coster
MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - Their presidential candidate had just narrowly
escaped an assassination attempt, a bullet grazing his ear on Saturday
from an AR-15-style semiautomatic weapon - a rifle frequently used by
mass shooters in the United States.
Yet in interviews with 12 Donald Trump delegates at his Republican Party
nominating convention in Milwaukee, none advocated for limits or bans on
assault rifles, raising the legal age to buy a gun, or even more robust
background checks.
The delegates were dead set against any type of reform to America's gun
laws.
Most viewed even mild measures, such as expanded background checks, or
raising the legal age to buy an assault weapon to 21, as infringements
on the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment, which grants citizens the
right to own guns.
Instead, the delegates said any gun-related reforms should focus on
funding better mental health support for troubled citizens, a standard
Republican position. They blamed gun crime and gun massacres - including
the assassination attempt on Trump - largely on mental illness and
weapons falling into the wrong hands.
U.S. law enforcement officials are still trying to determine why Thomas
Matthew Crooks, a 20-year-old nursing home aide, shot at Trump at his
election rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday. Crooks was shot dead in the
attack, which the FBI said was being investigated as potential domestic
terrorism.
More effective mental health services are the key to spotting potential
shooters and getting them help before they carry out a gun crime, the
delegates interviewed said.
"It's all about mental health," said Will Boone, a delegate from
Montana. "The right to have a gun is enshrined in the Constitution. Once
you start infringing on that, you'll start other rights being taken
away."
Steve Kramer, from Georgia, said it was a "lie" that expanded background
checks would help.
"If you look at most of the killings, someone stole the gun, so
background checks wouldn't matter," Kramer said.
Between 1966 and 2019, apart from school shooters who mainly stole their
weapons from family members, most people who committed mass shooting had
bought their weapons legally, according to data compiled by the National
Institute of Justice, a research agency of the Department of Justice.
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A pro-Trump supporter waves a flag reading God Guns and Trump during
a demonstration in support of former U.S. President Donald Trump who
was shot the previous day in an assassination attempt during a rally
in Pennsylvania, in Huntington Beach, California, U.S. July 14,
2024. REUTERS/Etienne Laurent/File Photo
The weapon used by Trump's would-be assassin was owned by his
father, according to investigators.
The Republican Party has generally blocked attempts to reform gun
laws, even after the massacre of 20 elementary school children in
Connecticut in 2012 by a gunman armed with an AR-15 assault-type
weapon and two handguns.
Efforts to pass universal background checks and an assault weapons
ban were defeated by Republicans in the U.S. Senate after that
school massacre.
During his 2017-2021 term, Trump tried several times to loosen gun
laws, said Kris Brown, president of Brady: United Against Gun
Violence.
Shortly after taking office he signed into law a bill that reversed
an Obama-era regulation that made it harder for people with mental
illness to purchase guns.
The Trump administration did ban bump stocks, an accessory that
essentially converts a semi-automatic weapon into a machine gun. A
bump stock was used in America's deadliest mass shooting, in Las
Vegas in 2017, when a gunman killed 60 and wounded more than 400
people.
In June, the conservative-leaning U.S. Supreme Court lifted the ban
on bump stocks.
In February, speaking to the National Rifle Association, Trump
pledged to undo all gun-related restrictions enacted by Democratic
President Joe Biden, whom he faces in the Nov. 5 election.
Matthew Rust, a delegate from Wisconsin, said he believed an armed
citizenry is a deterrent to shooters. "When a perpetrator knows
there may be law-abiding citizens that can defend themselves they
are less likely to take action," Rust said.
(Reporting by Tim Reid and Helen Coster in Milwaukee, Editing by
Ross Colvin and Howard Goller)
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