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Josh Segarra, who is from Orlando, embraces his wife Brace following a tribute a tribute to the Orlando nightclub shooting victims at the Survivor Tree of the 9/11 Memorial and Museum last Thursday. Kathy Willens/AP/Press Association Images

Four proposals to bring in tighter gun controls in the US are rejected

The Republican-controlled Senate couldn’t even agree to restrict the sale of firearms to suspected terrorists.

A DIVIDED US Senate blocked rival election-year plans to curb guns yesterday, eight days after the horror of Orlando’s mass shooting.

The massacre, in which 49 people were killed and over 50 others injured at a gay nightclub, intensified pressure on lawmakers. However they ended up in gridlock — even over restricting firearms for terrorists.

In largely party-line votes, senators rejected one proposal from each side to keep extremists from acquiring guns and a second shoring up the government’s system of required background checks for many firearms purchases.

With the chamber’s visitors’ galleries unusually crowded for a Monday evening — including relatives of victims of past mass shootings and people wearing orange T-shirts saying #ENOUGH gun violence — each measure fell short of the 60 votes needed to progress. Democrats called the GOP proposals unacceptably weak, while Republicans said the Democratic plans were too restrictive.

The stalemate underscored the pressure on each party to stand firm on the emotional gun issue going into November’s presidential and congressional elections. It also highlighted the potency of the National Rifle Association (NRA), which urged its huge and fiercely loyal membership to lobby senators to oppose the Democratic bills.

“Republicans say, ‘Hey look, we tried,’” senate minority leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, said. “And all the time, their cheerleaders, the bosses at the NRA, are cheering them.”

Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican from Kentuncky, said the Orlando shootings — in which the FBI says the American-born gunman swore allegiance to an Islamic State group leader — show the best way to prevent extremists’ attacks here is to defeat them overseas.

“No one wants terrorists to be able to buy guns,” McConnell said. He suggested that Democrats used the day’s votes “to push a partisan agenda or craft the next 30-second campaign ad”.

The horrific nightclub shooting carried out by Omar Mateen’s on Sunday, 12 June, is the largest mass shooting in recent US history, topping a string of similar incidents in recent years.

The FBI said Mateen — a focus of two terror investigations that were dropped — described himself as an Islamic soldier in a 911 call during the shootings. That let gun control advocates add national security and the spectre of terrorism to their arguments for firearms curbs.

Clinton and Trump

After the votes, presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton issued a one-word statement, “Enough,” followed by the names and ages of Orlando’s victims.

On Fox News Channel’s The O’Reilly Factor, expected GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump said he “absolutely” agrees that people on the government’s terror watch list should be barred from owning guns. He did not say if he supported the Republican or Democratic versions of bills rejected yesterday.

Only a handful of lawmakers changed positions from votes cast last December on similar proposals, highlighting each party’s enduring stances on guns. And there’s little sign that the House’s GOP leaders will allow votes.

Even so, GOP senators facing re-election this fall in swing states were under extraordinary pressure.

One vulnerable Republican, New Hampshire’s Kelly Ayotte, backed both bills blocking gun sales to terrorists, a switch from when she joined most Republicans in killing a similar Democratic plan last December. She expressed support for a narrower bipartisan plan, like one being crafted by Senator Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine.

Collins was trying to fashion a bipartisan bill preventing people on the government’s no-fly list from getting guns. She expressed optimism the Senate would vote on her plan, and Senator John Cornyn, a Republican from Texas, said that according to McConnell, if Collins wants a vote on her proposal, “She’ll get one.”

Monday’s votes came after Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, led a near 15-hour filibuster last week demanding a senate response to the Orlando killings. Murphy entered the senate shortly after the December 2012 massacre of 20 first-graders and six educators in Newtown, Connecticut.

chris Senator Chris Murphy Alex Brandon / AP/Press Association Images Alex Brandon / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

However, that slaughter and others have failed to spur congress to tighten gun curbs. The last were enacted in 2007, when the background check system was strengthened after that year’s mass shooting at Virginia Tech.

With Mateen’s professed loyalty to extremist groups and his 10-month inclusion on a federal terrorism watch list, Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California, proposed letting the government block many gun sales to known or suspected terrorists. People buying firearms from federally-licenced gun dealers can currently be denied for several reasons, chiefly for serious crimes or mental problems, but there is no specific prohibition for those on the terrorist watch list.

That list currently contains around one million people — including fewer than 5,000 Americans or legal permanent residents, according to the latest government figures. The narrower no-fly list has just 81,000 names.

Background checks 

No background checks are required for anyone buying guns privately online or at gun shows.

The GOP response to Feinstein was an NRA-backed plan by Cornyn. It would let the government deny a sale to a known or suspected terrorist — but only if prosecutors could convince a judge within three days that the would-be buyer was involved in terrorism.

The Feinstein and Cornyn amendments would require notification of law enforcement officials if people, like Mateen, who’d been under a terrorism investigation within the past five years were seeking to buy firearms.

Republicans said Feinstein’s proposal gave the government too much power to deny people’s constitutional right to own a gun and noted that the terrorist watch list has mistakenly included some people. Democrats said the three-day window Cornyn’s measure gave prosecutors to prove their case made his plan ineffective.

Murphy’s rejected proposal would widely expand the requirement for background checks, even to many private gun transactions, leaving few loopholes.

The defeated plan by senate judiciary committee chairman Charles Grassley, a Republican from Iowa, increased money for the background check system. It also revamped language prohibiting some people with mental health issues from buying a gun, which Democrats claimed would reduce current protections.

Yesterday’s votes were 53-47 for Grassley’s plan, 44-56 for Murphy’s, 53-47 for Cornyn’s and 47-53 for Feinstein’s — all short of the 60 needed.

Read: Joe Biden’s visit will close roads in Dublin

Read: The Debate Room: Should Britain leave the EU? An Irish perspective

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