Colo. attacks unlikely to affect gun laws
The Daily Rundown’s Chuck Todd talks about President Barack Obama’s visit to Colorado, where he spent three hours privately visiting with family members of the victims and then he spoke to the nation.
3
hours
ago
Susan Walsh / AP
President
Barack Obama hugs Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper after making a
statement July 22 from the University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora,
Colo. Colorado Sens. Mark Udall, left, and Michael Bennet, right, also
attended.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg explains why both President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both need to "tell the public what they're going to do," about gun control. Bloomberg says it's "not bad politics" to talk about the issue and he plans to stir up the conversation.
White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters traveling to Aurora with President Obama on Sunday that the president "believes we need to take steps that protect Second Amendment rights of the American people but that ensure that we are not allowing weapons into the hands of individuals who should not, by existing law, obtain those weapons."
MSNBC's Thomas Roberts talks to Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., about calls for tougher gun control laws in wake of the massacre in Colorado.
When Democratic Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords was nearly killed after being shot in the head at a constituent event in January of 2011, it did very little to affect gun laws despite the fact that the impact of that attack was arguably felt more intensely by the men and women who write the nation's laws.
The Obama administration had supported reinstating elements of the assault weapons ban, which expired in 2004. But even a friendly Democratic Congress early in the administration failed to muster the votes for any such law.
Part
of the reason for the shift toward more permissive gun laws involves
how effectively Republicans and the National Rifle Association have used
gun rights as a wedge issue against candidates in elections. While some
Democrats remain ardent proponents of stricter gun control,
conservative Democrats have deflected the issue by embracing Second
Amendment rights on the campaign trail. Think back, for instance, to a
2010 campaign commercial featuring West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin –
then seeking a Senate seat – literally shooting a paper copy of the
cap-and-trade environmental regulation bill.
Obama got a taste of
potent gun politics, too, during the 2008 Democratic presidential
primary. Obama weathered a small firestorm when he was quoted reflecting
about the resentments of Pennsylvania voters whose communities had
endured difficult conditions during the Bush administration."It's not surprising, then, they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations," Obama, then an Illinois senator, was quoted as saying.
Obama's general-election opponent, Mitt Romney, had been an advocate for enforcing existing gun laws during his time in office, signed his own assault weapons ban into law as governor and reiterated his support for the national ban in 2007.
But Romney has pivoted toward emphasizing existing laws, rather than proposing new regulations for gun owners.
"We have a right in this country to bear arms, and I know that there are people who think that somehow that should change, and they keep looking for laws for a way to stop awful things from happening," he said in February in Ohio. "And there are awful things that happen. But there already are laws that are designed to protect people, and unfortunately people violate the laws. So trying to find more laws to change bad behavior isn’t the answer, the answer is to find the people who are inclined to bad behavior."
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