Partisan divide continues in Congress over gun control reform
Essential question: Why have gun control laws been difficult to pass in the U.S.?
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June 30, 2016
Essential question: Why have gun control laws been difficult to pass in the U.S.?
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Democrats once again attempted to push forward gun control legislation this week, a week after the massacre at an Orlando nightclub became the deadliest mass shooting in American history.
In the Senate, Democrats introduced four gun control bills involving measures such as expanded background checks and a ban on gun sales to individuals suspected of having ties to terrorism. All four bills failed Monday after failing to secure the 60 vote minimum.
Voting for the bills fell mainly along party lines. Democratic party leaders claim Republicans cave to outside interests from the National Rifle Association, while the GOP leadership said the measures did little to address the real problems behind mass shootings.
Democrats made their case citing recent polls suggesting that a majority of Americans support increased gun control, such as a Reuters/Ipsos survey that found that about 71 percent support strong or moderate restrictions.
The Supreme Court, meanwhile, decided not to hear an appeal on the assault weapons ban put in place in Connecticut and New York following the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012, which killed 20 children and 6 adults.
Today, a group of Democratic members of the House of Representatives staged a sit-in on the House floor to demand a vote on gun control measures.
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