Skip to main content

Calls for new gun laws are falling on deaf ears | TheHill

posted onFebruary 22, 2018
>

Article snippet: Renewed calls for stricter gun controls following a school shooting in Florida that left 17 dead are falling on deaf ears. Legislators in states across the country have delayed, defeated or refused to take up new measures to prevent more gun violence — despite the impassioned calls of victims from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. In Florida's legislature, House Republicans blocked a Democratic effort to revive debate on a measure to ban assault weapons with student survivors from Parkland watching in the gallery.  The bill, introduced after the 2016 killings of 49 people at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, failed on a party-line vote. "It seemed almost heartless how they immediately pushed the button to say 'no,'" Sheryl Acquaroli, a 16-year-old student from Stoneman Douglas, told CNN's Anderson Cooper.  Advocates for gun control also ran into opposition in other states. In Arizona, Republicans blocked a Democratic effort to force debate over whether to ban bump stocks and other modifications to increase weapons' rate of fire — and instead voted to debate an anti-porn bill. In Florida, just after the vote to not debate an assault rifle ban, legislators did debate a measure that declares pornography a threat to public health. The shooter who killed 59 people in Las Vegas last October used a bump stock, leading to calls for their banning. But efforts to do so in Washington have gone nowhere. MORE to draft a memorandum banning bump stocks. Trum... Link to the full article to read more

Emotional score for this article