'This will be difficult': Obama unveils sweeping gun violence proposals, sees tough fight

Includes assault weapons ban, executive actions

1/17/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS
  • Obama-Gun-Control-children

    From left: Hinna Zeejah, 8, Taejah Goode, 10, Julia Stokes, 11, and Grant Fritz, 8, who wrote letters to President Obama about the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., watch as the president jokes about being left handed as he signs executive orders outlining proposals to reduce gun violence.

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

  • President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden hugs eight-year-old letter writer Grant Fritz during a news conference on proposals to reduce gun violence Wednesday in Washington.
    President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden hugs eight-year-old letter writer Grant Fritz during a news conference on proposals to reduce gun violence Wednesday in Washington.

    WASHINGTON — Conceding "this will be difficult," President Barack Obama urged a reluctant Congress on Wednesday to require background checks for all gun sales and ban both military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines in an emotion-laden plea to curb gun violence in America.

    The president's sweeping, $500 million plan, coming one month after the school massacre in Connecticut, marks the most comprehensive effort to tighten gun laws in nearly two decades. But his proposals, most of which are opposed by the National Rifle Association, face a doubtful future in a divided Congress where Republicans control the House.

    GUN CONTROL PACKAGE
    Proposals for curbing gun violence announced Wednesday by President Obama:
    NEEDS CONGRESSIONAL ACTION:
    — Requiring background checks on all gun sales. The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence says 40 percent of gun sales are conducted with no criminal background check, such as at gun shows and by private sellers over the Internet or through classified ads. Obama said there should be exceptions for cases like certain transfers among family members and temporary transfers for hunting purposes.
    — Reinstating the assault weapons ban. A 10-year ban on high-grade, military-style weapons expired in 2004. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., says such a ban might clear the Senate but doubts it could get through the House.
    — Renewing a 10-round limit on the size of ammunition magazines.
    — Prohibiting the possession, transfer, manufacture and import of dangerous armor-piercing bullets.
    — Senate confirmation of a director for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The agency has been run by an acting director, Todd Jones, whom Obama will nominate to become director.
    — New gun trafficking laws penalizing people who help criminals get guns.

    EXECUTIVE ORDER
    — Address legal barriers in health laws that bar some states from making available information about people who are prohibited from having guns.
    — Improve incentives for states to share information with the background check system.
    — Make sure that federal agencies share relevant information with the background check system.
    — Direct the attorney general to work with other agencies to review existing laws to make sure they can identify individuals who shouldn't have access to guns.
    — Direct the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other research agencies to conduct research into the causes and prevention of gun violence.
    — Clarify that no federal law prohibits doctors or other health care providers from contacting authorities when patients threaten to use violence.
    — Give local communities the opportunity to hire up to 1,000 school resource officers and counselors.
    — Require federal law enforcement to trace all recovered guns.
    — Propose regulations that will enable law enforcement to run complete background checks before returning firearms that have been seized.
    — Direct the Justice Department to analyze information on lost and stolen guns and make that information available to law enforcement.
    — Provide training for state and local law enforcement, first responders and school officials on how to handle active-shooter situations.
    — Make sure every school has a comprehensive emergency management plan.
    — Help ensure that young people get needed mental health treatment.
    — Ensure that health insurance plans cover mental health benefits.
    — Encourage development of new technology to make it easier for gun owners to safely use and store their guns.
    — Have the Consumer Product Safety Commission assess the need for new safety standards for gun locks and gun safes.
    — Launch a national c Conceding "this will be difficult," President Barack Obama urged a reluctant Congress on Wednesday to require background checks for all gun sales and ban both military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines in an emotion-laden plea to curb gun violence in America.

    Seeking to circumvent at least some opposition, Obama signed 23 executive actions on Wednesday, including orders to make more federal data available for background checks and end a freeze on government research on gun violence. But he acknowledged that the steps he took on his own would have less impact than the broad measures requiring approval from Capitol Hill.

    "To make a real and lasting difference, Congress, too, must act," Obama said, speaking at a White House ceremony with school children and their parents. "And Congress must act soon."

    The president's announcements capped a swift and wide-ranging effort, led by Vice President Joe Biden, to respond to the deaths of 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. But Obama's gun control proposals set him up for a tough political fight with Congress as he starts his second term, when he'll need Republican support to meet three looming fiscal deadlines and pass comprehensive immigration reform.

    "I will put everything I've got into this, and so will Joe," the president said. "But I tell you, the only way we can change is if the American people demand it."

    Key congressional leaders were tepid in their response to the White House proposals.

    Republican House Speaker John Boehner's office signaled no urgency to act, with spokesman Michael Steel saying only that "House committees of jurisdiction will review these recommendations. And if the Senate passes a bill, we will also take a look at that."

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he was committed to ensuring that the Senate will consider gun violence legislation "early this year." But he did not endorse any of Obama's specific proposals.

    The president vowed to use "whatever weight this office holds" to fight for his recommendations. He's likely to travel around the country in the coming weeks to rally public support and could engage his still-active presidential campaign operation in the effort. But he'll have to overcome a well-financed counter-effort by the NRA.

    "This will be difficult," Obama acknowledged. "There will be pundits and politicians and special interest lobbyists publicly warning of a tyrannical, all-out assault on liberty — not because that's true, but because they want to gin up fear or higher ratings or revenue for themselves."

    The president, speaking in front of an audience that included families of some of those killed in Newtown, said 900 Americans had lost their lives to gun violence in the four weeks since the school shootings.

    "We can't put this off any longer," Obama declared. "Every day we wait, the number will keep growing."

    Many Democrats say an assault weapons ban faces the toughest road in Congress. Obama wants lawmakers to reinstate the expired 1994 ban on the high-grade weapons, and strengthen the measure to prevent manufacturers from circumventing the prohibition by making cosmetic changes to banned guns.

    The president is also likely to face opposition to his call for Congress to limit ammunition magazines to 10 rounds.

    But Democrats are hopeful they can build consensus around the president's call for universal background checks. The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence says 40 percent of gun sales are conducted with no criminal background checks, such as in some instances at gun shows or by private sellers over the Internet or through classified ads.

    The NRA is opposed to all three measures. In a statement Wednesday, the gun lobby said, "Only honest, law-abiding gun owners will be affected" by Obama's efforts and the nation's children "will remain vulnerable to the inevitability of more tragedy."

    And on the eve of Obama's announcement, the NRA released an online video accusing him of being an "elitist hypocrite" for sending his daughters to school with armed guards while opposing having guards with guns at all U.S. schools.

     White House spokesman Jay Carney called the video "repugnant and cowardly."

    The president's proposals did include a $150 million request to Congress that would allow schools to hire 1,000 new police officers, counselors and psychologists. The White House plan also includes legislative and executive action to increase mental health services, including boosting funding for training aimed at getting young people into treatment more quickly.

    A lopsided 84 percent of Americans back broader background checks, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. Nearly six in 10 Americans want stricter gun laws, the same poll showed, with majorities favoring a nationwide ban on military-style weapons and limits on gun violence depicted in video games, movies and TV shows.

    The NRA and pro-gun lawmakers have long suggested that violent images in video games and entertainment are more to blame for mass shootings than the availability of guns. But Obama's proposals do little to address that concern, other than calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to research links between violent images and gun attacks.

    Government scientists have been prohibited from researching the causes and prevention of gun violence since 1996, when a budget amendment was passed that barred researchers from spending taxpayer money on such studies.

    The administration is calling on Congress to provide $10 million for expanded research.

    Obama also wants lawmakers to ban armor-piercing ammunition, except for use by the military and law enforcement. And he's asking them to create stiffer penalties for gun trafficking, to provide $14 million to help train police officers and others to respond to shootings, and to approve his nominee to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

    One of the president's executive actions on Wednesday was to nominate B. Todd Jones to head the ATF, which has been without a permanent director since 2006. Jones has served as the bureau's acting director since 2011.

    Other steps Obama took through his presidential powers include:

    — Ordering tougher penalties for people who lie on background checks.

    — Requiring federal law enforcement to trace guns recovered in criminal investigations.

    — Ordering a review of safety standards for gun locks and gun safes.