Trump Reiterates Support For Background Checks Following Reports He’d Softened On Strategy, But Warns Of ‘Slippery Slope’
President Donald Trump is expected to release a series of proposals aimed at curbing gun violence. Trump once again said that he would support closing loopholes in background checks just a day after it was reported that NRA chief Wayne LaPierre had changed the president's mind on the tactic. "Red flag" laws are also expected to make it into the proposal.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday his administration would seek to close background check loopholes for gun purchases after Democrats accused him of reversing course on gun control measures. Trump spoke with the leader of the National Rifle Association lobbying group, Wayne LaPierre, on Tuesday, a White House official said. Speaking to reporters outside the White House, Trump said he did not tell LaPierre, whose group strongly opposes increased gun restrictions, that he would avoid pursuing measures on background checks. (8/21)
Trump confirmed that he discussed background checks with Wayne LaPierre, head of the National Rifle Association,聽but he disputed news reports that he told LaPierre that background checks were off the table. 鈥淚 have an appetite for background checks,鈥 Trump said from the White House South Lawn as he departed聽for an event in Louisville, Kentucky. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be doing background checks. ... We鈥檙e going to be filling in some of the loopholes.鈥 (Wu, Collins and Fritze, 8/21)
Speaking to reporters as he departed the White House for Kentucky, the president said he considers gun violence a public health issue and is considering ways to make background checks more strict. But he also said, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e on that slope and all of a sudden nobody has any legal protection,鈥 adding, 鈥淥ur Second Amendment will remain strong.鈥 Told the 鈥渟lippery slope鈥 argument is a National Rifle Association talking point, Trump said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a Trump talking point.鈥 (Colvin and Kellman, 8/21)
The White House did not give a timetable for the proposals 鈥 which will likely include other legislation and executive actions addressing domestic terrorism, violent video games and mental health treatment 鈥 but suggested that the package would be timed to Congress's return in early September. The president received a formal briefing on Tuesday from his staff about the possible options, according to a White House official. (Kumar and Oprysko, 8/21)
Among the proposals under consideration are so-called 鈥渞ed flag鈥 provisions that would allow authorities to take guns away from people who pose a safety threat, an authority that might be paired with requirements that the person receive a mental health evaluation or be committed. (Bennett, 8/21)
After the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School, Senator Mitch McConnell had a message for his Kentucky constituents as his 2014 re-election fight loomed. 鈥淚 want you to know that I will be doing everything in my power as Senate Republican leader, fighting tooth and nail, to protect your Second Amendment rights,鈥 Mr. McConnell, a staunch opponent of limits on gun ownership, said in an automated call. He then helped quash expanded background check legislation backed by President Barack Obama and a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers. Responding to this month鈥檚 mass shootings in El Paso, Tex., and Dayton, Ohio, Mr. McConnell, his re-election fight again just ahead, was more measured. (Hulse, 8/21)
Senate Homeland Security Chairman Ron Johnson is casting major doubt on the prospects of significant gun regulations passing this fall, the latest sign that the effort to pass new firearm laws is starting to falter. The Wisconsin Republican said that a background checks measure based on the bill written by Sens. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and a national "red flag" bill are both unlikely to pass. He was open to GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham鈥檚 bill that would establish a red flag grant program, but said the Senate would need to 鈥渁ttach to those grants very strict guidelines in terms of due process.鈥 (Everett, 8/20)
This month鈥檚 shootings in El Paso and Dayton haven鈥檛 moved Champaign County GOP Rep. Jim Jordan any closer to backing universal background checks for gun purchasers or red flag laws that would let authorities take guns from those deemed mentally unstable. The House Freedom Caucus co-founder on Wednesday published an opinion piece on the FoxNews website that shoots down those suggestions and others as 鈥渋neffective and misguided.鈥 (Eaton, 8/21)