WHITE HOUSE
Biden considers regulating ‘ghost guns,’ other
executive actions to curb gun violence
The president’s movement on guns has, so far, been
more meetings than action.
By ANITA
KUMAR and LAURA BARRÓN-LÓPEZ
02/23/2021
08:29 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/23/biden-gun-safety-pandemic-471064
The White
House is weighing a number of gun safety proposals as it looks to deliver on
President Joe Biden's campaign promises. But some activists are upset that
after one month in office the administration has yet to set a firm timeline or
provide specifics about its overarching plan.
Among the
executive actions under consideration by the administration is one that would
require buyers of so-called ghost guns — homemade or makeshift firearms that
lack serial numbers — to undergo background checks, according to three people
who have spoken to the White House about their plans.
Sen.
Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), who spoke to the White House in the last week,
said he recommended the administration take executive actions to close the so-called
Charleston loophole that allows a gun to be transferred from licensed gun
dealers before a completed background check. But Biden aides were reluctant,
Blumenthal said.
Instead,
the White House is likely to stick with campaign promises to support legislation
to close the Charleston loophole, as well as measures designed to keep guns
away from people believed to be a danger to themselves or others and to
establish safety storage standards for firearms, according to one of the people
familiar with the plans.
“My view is
the bigger and bolder the better on gun violence prevention because we have a
unique window of opportunity,” Blumenthal said.
The desire
to go bigger and bolder is running up against a variety of different political
realities, however, among them a Senate that’s split down the middle and
advocates who are at odds over which policies to push and how quickly to push
them. Underlining it all is a promise that Biden made to act quickly on guns
after taking office — a promise that looks less likely as the Covid-19 pandemic
overshadows everything else.
The White
House has held several meetings on gun violence with prominent groups pushing
for gun restrictions, community-based groups asking for billions of dollars in
program funding and survivors of gun violence.
The
meetings are being led by Susan Rice, director of the Domestic Policy Council,
and Cedric Richmond, director of the Office of Public Engagement. During recent
meetings, Richmond shared with advocates that he lost a childhood friend to gun
violence, according to three people who were in conversations with the former
congressman.
A White
House official said that Biden is considering “every tool at our disposal,
including executive actions” and is looking at investing in community violence
programs, requiring background checks, banning assault weapons and
high-capacity magazines and repealing gun manufacturers’ immunity from
liability. But Biden still lacks a Senate-confirmed attorney general and
director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, who will
play a key role in any executive branch action on guns.
“During the
campaign, the president laid out an ambitious plan to keep our communities
safe, and he remains committed to that agenda,” White House spokesperson Mike
Gwin said.
The
discussions come as gun sales have skyrocketed amid a year of pandemic
quarantines, a summer of racial unrest and Biden’s victory in the presidential
election, after promising an aggressive push to reduce gun violence. The year
2020 saw a record number of gun homicides in the United States.
The
outreach from the Biden White House to gun safety groups has been lauded by the
more established organizations. “This administration is what, three weeks old
[but] it's the strongest gun safety administration in history, whether you're
talking about the president or the vice president or the Cabinet,” said John
Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety. “We've got full confidence
they're going to govern like it.”
Advocates
affiliated with those groups argue the chance for action in Congress and
elsewhere in the federal government has never been better, in part because
public support for changes have steadily increased after Newtown, Conn., and
subsequent shootings and in part because of the implosion of the once-mighty
National Rifle Association.
“We have
changed state legislatures. We have passed voter referendums. We have seen for
the first time in my time in this movement a... Democratic primary where every
single candidate was trying to outdo themselves on how much they care about
this issue,” said Christian Hayne, vice president of policy for Brady, a group
which supports increased firearms restrictions. “We do anticipate the momentum
will continue to build until we get the change that we desperately need.”
Biden has a
lengthy history of dealing with gun legislation, though his most recent effort
ended in notable failure. After Newtown, Conn., Obama asked him to push through
what he had hoped would be the biggest firearms restrictions in decades. But
after months of meetings and limited executive actions, a bill to require
expanded background checks died on the Senate floor.
The Senate
is even less Democratic now, split 50-50, meaning that any bill would require
at least 10 Republicans to vote with all Democrats. And, as such, grassroots
groups led by young people of color who’ve survived mass shootings or live in
communities battling daily gun violence want Biden to use his executive power
immediately to close loopholes for gun sellers.
Some of
them are urging the administration to begin disbursing money to 40 cities
across the country plagued by gun violence through discretionary agency grants
or by declaring a national emergency. Rather than wait for Congress to pass
funding in an infrastructure or gun control bill, groups like March For Our
Lives and Community Justice Action Fund say agencies can and should start
allocating funds to community-based programs now. They fear that the
administration’s current approach could take weeks, even months to result in
progress, and note that such lengthy timelines are at odds with Biden’s vow to
act on his first day in office.
“We have
incidents where there's three or four people getting shot [daily] and we don't
get the same kind of uproar and attention for those kinds of homicides and
mainly because they're Black and brown people,” said Eddie Bocanegra, senior
director of the progressive Heartland Alliance's READI Chicago chapter, who has
spoken to the White House.
Earlier
this month, Heartland was among the coalition of organizations representing
communities of color which sent a letter to the Biden administration expressing
disappointment that they were not included in a gathering the White House held
with more establishment gun control groups. According to four people who were
involved in recent meetings, the White House moved quickly to rectify the
situation and has since held at least two virtual calls with advocates from
groups across the country.
Bocanegra
said he was happy with the audience he received at the White House. But he
still expressed frustration that white-led gun control groups appeared to be
getting more attention after he had spent days helping the Biden transition on
policy.
“I want to
see my return on that investment,” he said.
Complicating
any effort to move gun safety measures — whether through legislation or
executive action — is the Covid pandemic. At the moment, nearly 2,000
Americans, on average, are dying each day from the virus. And while the
country’s cases and deaths have declined from their January peak, the White
House’s top priority remains reining in the coronavirus pandemic and
distributing economic relief, including a nearly $2 trillion Covid-19 bill
moving through Congress.
While the
White House focuses its efforts on the pandemic, lawmakers working on gun
control have been left waiting for signals. Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said he
plans to reintroduce his universal background check bill in the coming month,
though he wants to see a plan from the Biden administration first.
“I don't
think anybody's going to move forward on strategy without hearing from the
White House,” said Murphy, who plans to speak to Rice this week.
Murphy
himself has said he supports Biden using his executive authority to tackle gun
control. But if Democrats are going to pursue legislation, "our best
chance to pass a background checks proposal is this year. I don't want to have
to wait for a mass shooting.”


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