by Walter Brasch
President
Obama cast off his “No Drama Obama” garb, and became the fiery leader of hope
and change that Americans first elected in 2008. At a speech in Hartford,
Conn., the President, frustrated by Republican obstructionism, demanded of his
audience, “If you believe that the families of Newtown and Aurora and Tucson
and Virginia Tech and the thousands of Americans who have been gunned down in
the last four months deserve a vote, we all have to stand up.” He demand, “If
you want the people you send to Washington to have just an iota of the courage
that the educators at Sandy Hook showed when danger arrived on their doorstep,
then we’re all going to have to stand up.”
He
wanted the people to let Congress know it was “time to require a background
check for anyone who wants to buy a gun so that people who are dangerous to
themselves and others cannot get their hands on a gun.” He wanted the people to
let Congress know, “It’s time to crack down on gun trafficking so that folks
will think twice before buying a gun as part of a scheme to arm someone who
won’t pass a background check.” He asked the people “to tell Congress it’s time
to restore the ban on military-style assault weapons, and a 10-round limit for
magazines, to make it harder for a gunman to fire 154 bullets into his victims
in less than five minutes.” He pleaded that the people “have to tell Congress
it’s time to strengthen school safety and help people struggling with mental
health problems get the treatment they need before it’s too late.”
But,
what he really wanted was a vote. A simple up-or-down vote. The people, said
the President, at the very least “deserve a vote” not more obstructionism.
Smirking
with NRA drool slathering his five-term Senate body, Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.) wasn’t about to let that happen. He didn’t want a vote, even
a watered down version that would have all the ferocity of a baby canary.
McConnell
said he would filibuster all proposed legislation.
The
Senate Republicans, who believe they’re the “law and order party,” have rolled
over and allowed the NRA to pet them on their pork-bellied tummies. For more
than three decades, the NRA and explosives manufacturers successfully lobbied
Congress the to prohibit the use of taggants in explosives. These taggants
would identify bombs before detonation and enable agents of the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and explosives (ATF) to trace manufacturer and sale
of the explosives after explosion. For six years, the NRA blocked the appointment
of any nominee to head the ATF. With NRA paranoia guiding their own actions,
the Republicans have also forbidden the ATF from creating a computerized
database to better analyze and evaluate applications for firearms, and have
left the ATF underfunded and undermanned. This would be the same ATF that, with
fewer resources, now plays a major role in the Boston Marathon murders.
Five
weeks after the murders in Newtown, the McConnell for Senate campaign told the
voters they were “literally surrounded” by those who want to take their guns
away. In a robocall to his constituents, he parroted the NRA erroneous claim
that, “President Obama and his team are doing everything in their power to
restrict your constitutional right to keep and bear arms.” This would be
the same senator who, in 1991, supported Joe Biden’s bill that led to a 10 year
ban on semi-automatic and automatic weapons. This is the same senator who, in
1998, voted to support Barbara Boxer’s bill that required trigger locks for the
purchase of every hand gun. In less than a decade, McConnell turned to the
extreme Right and became little more than an NRA lackey, willing to wrap
himself in a faulty interpretation of the Second Amendment and block the will
of 90 percent of the American people, including a majority of all NRA members
and gun owners.
Republic
political strategist Karl Rove told journalist FoxNews reporter Chris Wallace,
“People want this issue to be discussed, they want it to be decided and we
don’t need to block everything in the Senate.” By a 68–31 vote, with 16
Republicans joining 52 Democrats, the Senate agreed to allow discussion on
proposed gun control bills.
The
first of several Senate bills, Wednesday, resulted in a 54–46 vote to expand
background checks for gun purchases to include all internet and gun show sales,
strengthen penalties for gun trafficking, and help fund additional school
security. The bill, known as a compromise proposal, was sponsored by Sens. Joe
Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), both of whom carry “A” ratings by the
NRA. Five Democrats voted against the bill; four Republicans voted for it. However, because of the 60-vote rule invoked
by the NRA-fed obstructionist Republicans, and agreed to by the Democrats, it
failed. The NRA, exercising its usual fear-mongering tactics, spread a $500,000
robocall campaign the day of the vote, and claimed the bill would lead to a
national gun registry; provisions in the bill specifically excluded that
possibility. President Obama would later say that the “gun
lobby and its allies willfully lied about the bill.”
New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, on behalf of Mayors Against Illegal Guns, representing
more than 900 American cities, called out the 46 senators who voted against the
bill. “Today's vote is a damning indictment of the stranglehold that special
interests have on Washington,” said Bloomberg. “More than 40 U.S. senators
would rather turn their backs on the 90 percent of Americans who support
comprehensive background checks than buck the increasingly extremist wing of the
gun lobby.” Gov. Dan Malloy (D-Conn.) said the
minority “who voted against this proposal should be ashamed of themselves.” aid
the Senate had “ignored the will of the American people,” adding that those
senators who voted against the expanded background checks chose to “obey the
leaders of the powerful corporate gun lobby, instead of their
constituents.” Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who has spent two years in
recovery from an attempted assassination, said the failure to pass meaningful
legislation was “based on political fear and on cold calculations about the
money of special interests like the National Rifle Association.”
In rapid succession, a ban on assault weapons, a
ban on high-capacity gun magazines and a bipartisan compromise to expand
background checks for gun purchasers all failed to get the 60 votes needed. Even a bipartisan amendment to impose
stiff penalties on gun traffickers was defeated, receiving 58 votes.
New
York, Colorado, and Maryland have all recently passed common-sense gun safety
reforms without violating anyone’s Second Amendment rights. The people of this
democracy demand better controls over who can own guns. But until the members
of Congress develop that one iota of courage that President Obama asked for, the
United States will continue to have the highest number of guns per population of
178 countries—and also rank among the world’s top 10 countries in the rate of
deaths per population from guns.
No comments:
Post a Comment