President Obama Announces Gun Control Actions
By PETER BAKER, NYT
Stymied by Congress, President Obama used his executive powers on Thursday to advance his gun control agenda by closing a loophole in the current background check system and barring the reimportation of surplus American military weapons.
Months after failing to push significant gun legislation through the Senate, Mr. Obama announced the actions as part of what the White House said would be a continuing push to keep firearms out of the hands of dangerous people. Gun rights advocates have criticized him as overstepping by trying to use his own authority to curb gun proliferation.
“Even as Congress fails to act on common-sense proposals, like expanding criminal background checks and making gun trafficking a federal crime, the president and vice president remain committed to using all the tools in their power to make progress toward reducing gun violence,” the White House said in a statement.
The two actions were modest in scope. Currently, the White House said, felons can evade background checks by registering a weapon to a trust or corporation. A proposed regulation would require people associated with trusts or corporations to undergo background checks just as if they had bought the firearms as individuals.
(More here.)
Stymied by Congress, President Obama used his executive powers on Thursday to advance his gun control agenda by closing a loophole in the current background check system and barring the reimportation of surplus American military weapons.
Months after failing to push significant gun legislation through the Senate, Mr. Obama announced the actions as part of what the White House said would be a continuing push to keep firearms out of the hands of dangerous people. Gun rights advocates have criticized him as overstepping by trying to use his own authority to curb gun proliferation.
“Even as Congress fails to act on common-sense proposals, like expanding criminal background checks and making gun trafficking a federal crime, the president and vice president remain committed to using all the tools in their power to make progress toward reducing gun violence,” the White House said in a statement.
The two actions were modest in scope. Currently, the White House said, felons can evade background checks by registering a weapon to a trust or corporation. A proposed regulation would require people associated with trusts or corporations to undergo background checks just as if they had bought the firearms as individuals.
(More here.)
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