Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
McConnell Says He’s Waiting on Trump to Chart Path on Guns
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
September 3, 2019

Share

WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are waiting for the White House to chart a path forward on gun violence legislation, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday, effectively putting the burden on President Donald Trump to decide the GOP’s legislative response to the spate of mass shootings that included another deadly attack in Texas over the weekend.

“The administration is in the process of studying what they’re prepared to support, if anything.” — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
Asked about prospects for a Senate vote on legislation passed by the Democratic-controlled House to expand background checks for gun purchases, McConnell said, “The administration is in the process of studying what they’re prepared to support, if anything.”
The Kentucky Republican said he expects an answer from the White House next week, adding that he wants to make sure that senators “would actually be making a law and not just having serial votes” on proposals to stem gun violence.
McConnell’s comments point to the challenge ahead as Congress returns to a gun debate that emerged during their summer recess, when mass shootings in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio left 31 people dead. While Trump has said he wants to work with Congress to “stop the menace of mass attacks,” he’s waffled on support for expanding background checks, making the next steps uncertain. Trump and other Republicans have talked of pursuing other measures to address mental health or codify “red flag” laws that allow guns to be taken from people who pose harm to themselves or others, but even those measures face skepticism among GOP lawmakers.
The dynamic appears unchanged even after a shooting in West Texas over the weekend that killed at least seven people, with McConnell setting a high bar for action in the Senate when it returns next week after a five-week recess. If Trump favors background-checks or other legislation he has discussed publicly in recent weeks, and senators “know that if we pass it it’ll become law,” then he’ll put it on the Senate floor for a vote, McConnell told radio host Hugh Hewitt.

This Time There Seems to Be More Sustained Momentum

Trump in a tweet Tuesday urged Congress to “get back to work,” but omitted any reference to guns, focusing instead on prescription drug prices, healthcare and infrastructure.
Trump said Sunday that any gun measure must satisfy the competing goals of protecting public safety and the constitutional right to gun ownership.
“For the most part, sadly, if you look at the last four or five (shootings) going back even five or six or seven years … as strong as you make your background checks, they would not have stopped any of it,” Trump said. “So it’s a big problem. It’s a mental problem. It’s a big problem.”
Trump’s comments were reminiscent of his wavering last year, when he vowed to support background checks in the wake of a school shooting in Parkland, Florida, only to relent after receiving pressure from the National Rifle Association.
This time there seems to be more sustained momentum to produce some sort of measure after Trump asked aides to pull together a comprehensive list of ideas. White House officials have been meeting with lawmakers and congressional staff as they try to formulate a plan that Trump can support without risking backlash from his political base.
“We’re looking at a lot of different bills, ideas, concepts. It’s been going on for a long while,” Trump told reporters Sunday after returning to the White House from Camp David.
NRA head Wayne LaPierre has repeatedly spoken to Trump and warned him about losing support from NRA members. But White House aides contend the president’s base would stick with him regardless. They point to strong support for background checks among Republicans and gun owners and believe they can fashion a proposal that the gun lobby — while not supporting — may not vehemently oppose.

House Democrats Are Moving Ahead on Other Bills

Among the proposals being considered: red flag laws, more money for mental health and making sure juvenile information gets into existing background checks. Additionally, White House aides have said Attorney General William Barr is drafting legislation to speed up the death penalty for mass shooters.

“I am skeptical that these efforts are going to bear fruit. I think it’s very hard to negotiate with this White House when the president’s public positions seem to change by the day. I’m going to try … because the stakes are so high.” Sen. Chris Murphy
Sen. Chris Murphy, a leading gun control supporter, said Trump has told him personally that he remains committed to working on expanding background checks.
Even so, the Connecticut Democrat rates the chance of Congress actually approving anything at “less than 50-50,” especially if Trump appears willing “to give the NRA veto power” over legislation such as a bipartisan bill to expand background checks being pushed Sens. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.
“I am skeptical that these efforts are going to bear fruit. I think it’s very hard to negotiate with this White House when the president’s public positions seem to change by the day,” Murphy said last month. “I’m going to try … because the stakes are so high.”
As senators continue conversations, House Democrats are moving ahead on other bills, with the House Judiciary Committee set to consider a host of proposals to address gun violence at a hearing next week. The panel postponed a hearing originally scheduled Wednesday because of Hurricane Dorian.
The committee will consider bills to ban high-capacity magazines, establish a federal program for “red flag” laws and expand bans on firearm ownership to people convicted of certain hate crimes. The panel will also hold a hearing later this month on a bill to ban military-style assault weapons.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

DON'T MISS

Google to Appeal Against Part of US Court’s Decision in Monopoly Case

DON'T MISS

How to Catch the Shooting Stars of Spring’s First Meteor Shower, the Lyrids

DON'T MISS

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

DON'T MISS

NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Is Speeding Toward Another Close Encounter With an Asteroid

DON'T MISS

The Abrego Garcia Case Pulls Democrats Into the Immigration Debate Trump Wants to Have

DON'T MISS

Katy Perry Gears Up for Sci-Fi Inspired World Tour

DON'T MISS

10,000 Pages of Records About Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 Assassination Are Released

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Tien Hoang Nguyen

DON'T MISS

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Arrives in Court as He Seeks Delay to Sex Trafficking Trial

UP NEXT

Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Trump Plan to End Birthright Citizenship

UP NEXT

Popular AIs Head-to-Head: OpenAI Beats DeepSeek on Sentence-Level Reasoning

UP NEXT

Al Sharpton Calls Meeting With Target’s CEO Amid DEI Backlash ‘Very Constructive and Candid’

UP NEXT

Former Pentagon Spokesman Tied to Online DEI Purge Was Asked to Resign

UP NEXT

The Kings Agree to Hire Scott Perry as General Manager, AP Source Says

UP NEXT

Shooting at Florida State Sends Students Running; Nearby Hospital Says It’s Treating People

UP NEXT

Actor Michelle Trachtenberg Died of Complications From Diabetes, Says NYC Medical Examiner

UP NEXT

Zoom Down for Thousands of Users, Downdetector Shows

UP NEXT

Puerto Rico Goes Dark After Widespread Power Plant Failure

UP NEXT

Harper and Realmuto Homer to Help Lead the Phillies to a Win Over the Giants

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

11 minutes ago

NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Is Speeding Toward Another Close Encounter With an Asteroid

20 minutes ago

The Abrego Garcia Case Pulls Democrats Into the Immigration Debate Trump Wants to Have

28 minutes ago

Katy Perry Gears Up for Sci-Fi Inspired World Tour

33 minutes ago

10,000 Pages of Records About Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 Assassination Are Released

39 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Tien Hoang Nguyen

42 minutes ago

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Arrives in Court as He Seeks Delay to Sex Trafficking Trial

47 minutes ago

Trump Extends Hiring Freeze Into July as a Culling of the Workforce Continues

1 hour ago

Free Skateboard Event Brings Pro Legends, Family Fun to Fresno on Saturday

1 hour ago

Israeli Strikes Kill at Least 25 in Gaza and Huckabee Makes First Appearance as US Ambassador

1 hour ago

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

(Reuters) – The U.S. Interior Department on Friday said it would begin taking public input for a new five-year offshore oil and gas le...

1 minute ago

President Donald Trump looks on on the day he signs executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 17, 2025. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)
1 minute ago

Trump Administration Kicks off Plan for Expanded Offshore Drilling

4 minutes ago

Google to Appeal Against Part of US Court’s Decision in Monopoly Case

7 minutes ago

How to Catch the Shooting Stars of Spring’s First Meteor Shower, the Lyrids

11 minutes ago

US Intel Contradicts Trump Claims Linking Gang to Venezuelan Government

20 minutes ago

NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Is Speeding Toward Another Close Encounter With an Asteroid

28 minutes ago

The Abrego Garcia Case Pulls Democrats Into the Immigration Debate Trump Wants to Have

33 minutes ago

Katy Perry Gears Up for Sci-Fi Inspired World Tour

39 minutes ago

10,000 Pages of Records About Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 Assassination Are Released

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend