US senators reach gun deal

by time news


VTwenty American senators, Republicans and Democrats, announced Sunday an agreement on several provisions to better regulate the use of firearms, minimal measures after recent killings that shocked the United States.

These measures, which require a supermajority to be approved in the Senate, include an encouragement for states to remove weapons from those deemed dangerous as well as others aimed at mental health and safety in schools, but do not include the essential to the reforms demanded by the Democrats and Joe Biden. The President of the United States, however, immediately hailed the “insufficient but “significant progress”, believing that it would be “the most significant text on gun control to be voted on in Congress for decades”.

The presence of ten Republican senators among the signatories of the press release announcing this compromise suggests that such a text has a real chance of passing the Senate if all 50 elected Democrats are in favor of it. A qualified majority of 60 votes is required for such a bill to be adopted, which has so far blocked any major progress towards better regulation of firearms, due to opposition from the Conservatives.

“A Common Sense Proposal”

The massacre in an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, which killed 21 people, including 19 children, had triggered several parliamentary initiatives, including that of this group of senators, led by Democrat Chris Murphy, who discreetly worked on the latter days to find an agreement that can be approved by Congress. The twenty senators, ten Republicans and ten Democrats, agreed to “a common-sense, bipartisan proposal to protect America’s children, keep our schools safe, and reduce the danger of violence across the country,” the joint statement read.

READ ALSOThe AR-15, star of the arms fair in Houston

Their proposals also include stronger criminal and psychological background checks for gun buyers between the ages of 18 and 21 as well as federal funding for various mental health programs. On Saturday, tens of thousands of Americans took to the streets of many cities across the country, including the capital Washington, to “stop these massacres” and demand that Congress pass reforms aimed at better restricting access to weapons. fire. The House of Representatives had voted on Wednesday a different text with stronger measures, including the ban on the sale of semi-automatic rifles to those under 21 and that of large capacity magazines, but it has almost no chance of go to the Senate.


You may also like

Leave a Comment