Republican Lawmakers Pump Brakes On Gun Control Momentum
House Speaker Paul Ryan and Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) both moved to temper enthusiasm about getting any gun control legislation through Congress, despite the surge of public ire following the latest mass school shooting. Meanwhile, lawmakers will meet with President Donald Trump today to discuss ways to battle gun violence.
House GOP leaders downplayed the need for Congress to pass expansive new gun control measures on Tuesday, instead turning their ire on the FBI and local law enforcement for failing to prevent the Parkland, Fla. school shooting. Speaker Paul Ryan told reporters at a press conference that 鈥渨e shouldn鈥檛 be banning guns for law-abiding citizens鈥 but 鈥渇ocusing on making sure that citizens who shouldn鈥檛 get guns in the first place, don鈥檛 get those guns.鈥 Ryan 鈥 who said arming teachers was a 鈥済ood idea鈥 but a local issue that Congress should not infringe upon 鈥 touted a House-passed bill to reinforce background checks under current law. (Bade, 2/27)
A key GOP lawmaker says it鈥檚 鈥渦nlikely鈥 that a provision restricting research on gun violence gets removed in next month鈥檚 spending bill. 鈥淚t's unlikely that we would remove it in this particular legislation simply because this is a $1.2 trillion bill,鈥 Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), the chairman of the House Appropriations Health Subcommittee, told reporters on Tuesday. 鈥淚t shouldn't be derailed for a single thing.鈥 (Sullivan, 2/27)
Connecticut has had a 鈥渞ed flag鈥 law for years, but after the Parkland, Fla., school shooting, some in Congress think other states should be prodded to allow authorities to remove guns, at least temporarily, from those who may be a danger to themselves or others. Connecticut鈥檚 red flag law, enacted in聽1999 and the first in the nation, allows two聽law聽enforcement officers, or one state鈥檚 attorney, to petition a court for a firearms restraining order. (Radelat, 2/27)
Some gun safety proposals passed their first Florida Senate committee without an assault weapons ban. While top GOP lawmakers are calling the effort bipartisan, some Democrats pushing for more gun reforms disagree. Hundreds of people crowded inside and outside a Senate committee room Monday for the first hearing of the gun safety bills in the Senate Rules committee. (Cordner, 2/27)