‘Enough, Enough’: Biden Calls On Lawmakers to
Pass Gun Legislation
Michael D.
Shear
June 2,
2022, 2:00 p.m. ETJune 2, 2022
June 2,
2022
Michael D.
Shear
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/02/us/politics/biden-guns-speech.html
“The fact that the majority of the Senate Republicans
don’t want any of these proposals, even to be debated or come up for a vote, I
find unconscionable,” President Biden said on Thursday. “We can’t fail the
American people again.”
WASHINGTON
— President Biden demanded on Thursday that lawmakers respond to communities
turned into “killing fields” by passing far-reaching limits on guns, calling on
Congress to ban assault-style weapons, expand background checks and pass “red
flag” laws after massacres in Texas and New York.
In a rare
evening address to the nation, Mr. Biden dared Republicans to ignore the
repeated convulsions of anger and grief from gun violence by continuing to
block gun measures supported by large majorities in both parties, and even
among gun owners.
“My God,”
he declared from the Cross Hall, a ceremonial part of the White House
residence, which was lined with candles in honor of victims of gun violence.
“The fact that the majority of the Senate Republicans don’t want any of these
proposals, even to be debated or come up for a vote, I find unconscionable. We
can’t fail the American people again.”
Mr. Biden’s
speech came a day after a mass shooting in Tulsa, Okla., that killed four
victims and nine days after a massacre in Uvalde, Texas, that took the lives of
19 elementary school children and two teachers. Ten days before that, 10 Black
people were gunned down in a grocery store in Buffalo. The list, Mr. Biden
said, goes on.
“After
Columbine, after Sandy Hook, after Charleston, after Orlando, after Las Vegas,
after Parkland — nothing has been done,” he said, lamenting decades of
inaction.
With the
17-minute address, Mr. Biden abruptly shed the reluctance of his White House to
engage in what could become yet another fruitless partisan confrontation,
played out amid funerals in Uvalde, Buffalo and Tulsa. After weeks of carefully
calibrating his calls for action, the president on Thursday did not hold back.
“Enough,
enough. It’s time for each of us to do our part,” he told Americans. “For the
children we’ve lost. For the children we can save. For the nation we love.”
“Let’s hear
the call and the cry,” he said, almost pleading with his fellow politicians in
Washington. “Let’s meet the moment. Let us finally do something.”
Whether
that will happen remains unclear. Despite his forceful tone, Mr. Biden all but
acknowledged in his speech the political realities that could make him just
another in a long line of presidents to have demanded action on guns, only to
fail. He called the fight “hard,” and moments after urging a ban on assault
weapons, he offered alternatives if that proved to be impossible.
“If we
can’t ban assault weapons, then we should raise the age to purchase them from
18 to 21, strengthen the background checks,” he said. He called on Congress to
“enact safe storage law and red flag laws, repeal the immunity that protects
gun manufacturers from liability, address the mental health crisis.”
In his
remarks, Mr. Biden turned his evident cynicism about Republicans into a kind of
political threat, saying that “if Congress fails, I believe this time a
majority of the American people won’t give up either. I believe the majority of
you will act to turn your outrage into making this issue central to your vote.”
Mr. Biden
is not a newcomer to the gun debate.
He has
repeatedly said he favors reinstating the ban on assault weapons that he helped
pass as a senator and was law for a decade before it expired in 2004. He has
called on lawmakers to pass universal background checks for a decade, since 20
children were killed in a shooting in Newtown, Conn., in 2012.
But both of
those measures are seen as highly unlikely to pass in Congress, where fierce
Republican opposition has historically stood in their way. Lawmakers in both
parties have said recently that they do not believe there is enough bipartisan
support to approve either approach.
House
Democrats on Thursday advanced a wide-ranging package of gun control
legislation that would prohibit the sale of semiautomatic rifles to people
under 21 and ban the sale of magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of
ammunition. But those measures, too, were all but certain to die in the Senate.
Democrats
put forward the legislation in response to the killings in Uvalde and the
racist massacre in Buffalo — both, the police say, at the hands of 18-year-old
gunmen using legally purchased AR-15-style weapons.
A bitterly
divided House Judiciary Committee spent Thursday considering the legislation
and approved it Thursday evening, on a party-line vote of 25 to 19. Fierce
Republican opposition during the committee debate underscored the partisan
animosity.
Representative
Jerrold Nadler, Democrat of New York and the chairman of the Judiciary
Committee, warned that another shooting was not far away. He pleaded with
Republicans, “My friends, what the hell are you waiting for?”
Republicans
deride such measures as unconstitutional attempts to take guns from law-abiding
Americans, robbing them of their right to defend themselves. Representative Dan
Bishop, Republican of North Carolina, expressed outrage that Democrats had
painted Republicans as complicit in mass shootings, declaring, “You are not
going to bully your way into stripping Americans of fundamental rights.”
Karine
Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said administration officials had
been in close touch with lawmakers over the past several days as a bipartisan
group of senators discussed a narrower set of limits on gun ownership.
The negotiations
have centered on expanding background checks and providing incentives for
states to pass red flag laws, which allow guns to be seized from dangerous
people. The group is also looking at proposals on the safe storage of guns at
home, community violence and mental health, according to aides and senators
involved in the talks.
With
Republicans unanimously opposed to most major gun control measures, the Senate
talks offer what is probably the best chance at finding a bipartisan compromise
on guns that could pass the 50-to-50 Senate, where 60 votes are needed to break
a filibuster and bring legislation to a vote.
But the
endeavor faces long odds, with little evidence that either side is willing to
give ground on a debate that has been stalled for years.
Senator
Christopher S. Murphy of Connecticut is leading the talks for Democrats, joined
by his fellow party members Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Kyrsten Sinema
of Arizona, Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico.
The Republican senators they are huddling with include Lindsey Graham of South
Carolina, Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and
Susan Collins of Maine.
Those nine
negotiators met over Zoom on Wednesday to discuss their progress, convening for
an hour after days of individual phone calls and smaller meetings with each
other and their colleagues. Talks were expected to continue before the Senate
returns early next week.
“We are
making rapid progress toward a common-sense package that could garner support
from both Republicans and Democrats,” Ms. Collins said in a brief statement
after the meeting.
Senator
John Cornyn of Texas, a top ally to Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the
Republican leader, has also been involved in discussions, including a Tuesday
meeting with Mr. Murphy, Ms. Sinema and Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of
North Carolina.
Democratic
leaders have warned that if an agreement cannot be reached quickly, they will
force votes on the bills in the House, which do not have Republican support, to
demonstrate for Americans which lawmakers are standing in the way of passing
gun safety measures.
“I’m
cleareyed about the history of failure,” Mr. Blumenthal said in an interview
after Wednesday’s meeting. “But if there’s ever a moment to put up or shut up,
this one is it.”
In the days
immediately after the Buffalo and Uvalde shootings, both the president and Vice
President Kamala Harris largely stayed away from any direct negotiations with
lawmakers about how to create a response to the shootings that can pass in
Congress.
But on
Thursday, Mr. Biden abandoned that approach, deciding instead to lay down a
marker that will cement his legacy as a president who fought for tougher gun
laws, successful or not.
In his
speech on Thursday, Mr. Biden described the deep grief that he experienced when
he and his wife talked to the families of victims in the two mass shootings.
“At both
places, we spent hours with hundreds of family members, who were broken, whose
lives will never be the same,” he said. “They had one message for all of us: Do
something. Just do something. For God’s sake, do something.”
“How much
more carnage are we willing to accept?” he asked. “How many more innocent
American lives must be taken before we say: Enough. Enough.”
And he made
the target of his comment clear, saying it now falls to Congress to pass the
far-reaching laws it has refused to in the past.
“The
question now is: What will the Congress do?” he said. The president said he
supported the efforts by the bipartisan group in the Senate to find a
compromise, but called it the least lawmakers should do.
The
approach Thursday night was more like the response from former President Barack
Obama in January 2013, just weeks after the shooting at the school in Newtown.
Mr. Obama,
flanked by Mr. Biden, who was then the vice president, proposed a package of
gun control measures, including: ensuring that all gun owners go through a
background check; improving state reporting of criminals and the mentally ill;
banning assault weapons; and capping magazine clip capacity at 10 bullets.
In the face
of Republican opposition, Mr. Obama dropped his demand for an assault weapon
ban and limits on the size of magazine clips. After months of pushing by Mr.
Obama and Mr. Biden, the Senate rejected a bipartisan effort to expand
background checks.
In scathing
comments after the bill died, Mr. Obama derided senators for deciding that the
lives of children were not worth the effort to pass legislation. A decade
later, Mr. Obama’s grim assessment stands as a warning for Mr. Biden of what
might happen again.
“All in
all,” Mr. Obama said at the time, “this was a pretty shameful day for
Washington.”
Emily
Cochrane, Catie Edmondson and Zolan Kanno-Youngs contributed reporting.
Michael D.
Shear is a veteran White House correspondent and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner
who was a member of team that won the Public Service Medal for Covid coverage
in 2020. He is the co-author of “Border Wars: Inside Trump's Assault on
Immigration.” @shearm


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