Washington
(AFP) - Over 200 US mayors demanded Thursday that the US Senate return from its
summer break and immediately pass gun control legislation, after mass shootings
in two major cities left 31 dead.
They wrote
to the Senate's Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and top Democrat
Chuck Schumer demanding the chamber approve bills passed by the lower House
requiring background checks for all gun purchases and regulation of secondary
sales.
"Already
in 2019, there have been over 250 mass shootings," said the 214 members of
the influential US Conference of Mayors, including Dee Margo of El Paso, Texas
and Nan Whaley of Dayton, Ohio -- the two cities where 31 people were gunned
down at the weekend.
The call
will add to the mounting pressure on McConnell, who has stifled congressional
efforts to expand gun controls amid Republicans' fears that they could suffer
at the ballot box in next year's elections.
"The
tragic events in El Paso and Dayton this weekend are just the latest reminders
that our nation can no longer wait for our federal government to take the
actions necessary to prevent people who should not have access to firearms from
being able to purchase them," the letter said.
The
conference's president, Bryan Barnett, described his members as being "on
the frontlines" of an epidemic that cannot wait for a federal government
solution.
"Keeping our cities safe is not a partisan issue," said Barnett, the mayor of Rochester Hills, Michigan.
"Keeping our cities safe is not a partisan issue," said Barnett, the mayor of Rochester Hills, Michigan.
The letter
pointed to two background check bills passed by the Democrat-controlled House
in February that McConnell has essentially blocked from consideration in the
Republican-controlled Senate.
If one of
the two bills had been law in 2015, the mayors' letter said, "the terrible
tragedy that occurred at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston might have been
avoided."
On June 17,
2015 white supremacist Dylann Roof murdered nine African-Americans in a church
in Charleston, South Carolina.
Despite a
criminal background Roof was able to buy the handgun he used in the shooting.
On
Wednesday President Donald Trump said he supported proposed legislation in the
Senate that would block gun sales to people with mental health issues.
But Trump
said he did not think there was political support for tougher legislation, like
that passed already by the House, or bans on highly lethal assault rifles used
in many mass shootings.


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.