The Boston Globe - 08.08.2019

(Joyce) #1

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2019 The Boston Globe The Nation A


BySheryl Gay Stolberg
NEWYORKTIMES
WASHINGTON— Senator
Chuck Schumer, the Democrat-
ic leader, put the brakes on Re-
publicans’ quick embrace of
“red flag” laws as a responseto
last weekend’s gun violence,
saying on Wednesday that any
gun-related legislation moving
through the Senate must be ac-
companied by a House bill re-
quiringbackgroundcheckson
all gun purchasers.
Red flag laws allow the au-
thorities to obtain a special type
of protective order — known as
an extremerisk protection or-
der, or ERPO— to removeguns
frompeople deemed danger-
ous. Republicans, including
President Trump,are coalesc-
ing aroundthe concept, and
Senator Lindsey Graham,the
South Carolina Republican who
chairs the Senate Judiciary
Committee, is drafting a bill to
developa federal grant pro-
gram to helpstates passand
carry out such laws.
“We Democrats are not go-
ing to settle for half measures
so Republicanscan feel better
and try to pushthe issue of gun
violence off to the side,” Schum-
er said in a statement. “Demo-
crats in the Senate will seek to
require that any ERPO bill that
comes to the flooris accompa-
nied by a voteon the House-
passed universal background
checks legislation.”
Trump,on his way to Day-
ton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas,
whereback-to-backmassacres
over the weekend left 31 people
dead,toldreporters he was
opento expanding background
checksfor gun purchases — a
surprising development, given
that the National RifleAssocia-
tion,the nation’s largest gun
lobby, and many Republicans
are vehemently opposed.
But Senator Mitch McCon-
nell of Kentucky, the Senate ma-
jority leader, has blocked con-
sideration of the House bills. In-
stead, McConnell has told three
top committee chairmen,in-
cluding Graham, to “reflect on
the subjects the president
raised” in his speech from the
WhiteHouse on Monday and
engage in “bipartisandiscus-
sions of potential solutions to
helpprotect our communities
while not infringingon Ameri-
cans’ constitutional rights.”
Gun violence legislation is
one of the most divisive issues


in Washington, and it has been
thrust to the fore,yet again, by
the Daytonand El Paso shoot-
ings. Democrats’ tactics are not
entirely clear; by saying Demo-
crats will “seekto require”that
any Senate legislation is accom-
paniedby the House back-
ground checks bills, Schumer
stopped short of threatening to
employ a filibuster to block
stand-alone red flag legislation.
“The notion that passing a
tepidversionof an Extreme
Risk Protection Order (ERPO)
bill — alone — is close to getting
the job done in addressing ram-
pantgunviolenceinthe USis
wrong and would be an ineffec-
tive cop-out,” he said.
Virtuallythe entireHouse
Democratic Caucus sent McCo-
nnell a letter on Wednesday, de-

mandingthat he take up two
House-passed bills, one to ex-
pand criminal background
checks to would-be gun buyers
on the Internet and at gun
shows, and another to lengthen
the waiting period for gun buy-
ers to allow moretime for the
FBI to investigate.
“This inaction must stop,”
the letter said.
The political landscape
around gun legislation in Wash-
ington may be shifting. Two
new Democratic membersof
Congress — Representatives
Lucy McBath of Georgia, whose
son was fatally shot in 2012,
and Jason Crow of Colorado —
bothwonRepublican-held
seats after runningon a prom-
ise to address gun violence. And
many Republicanssoundrat-
tled after the weekend killings,
amidpublicoutcry overtoo
many massshootings that
prompt “thoughts and prayers”
but no action from Washington.

Critics say federal


‘red flag’ law on


guns not enough


ByTonyRomm
andDrew Harwell
WASHINGTON POST
WASHINGTON— The
White House will host top tech
companies Friday to discuss
the rise of violent onlineex-
tremism, marking the Trump
administration’s first major en-
gagement on the issue days af-
ter a mass shooting in Texas
left 22 people dead.
The gatheringwill include
‘‘senior administration officials
along with representatives of a
range of companies,’’ White
House spokesman Judd Deere
said in a statement. He did not
namewhichcompanies would
attend.
The WhiteHouse effort fol-
lowsan attack this weekend in
El Paso that was announced on
the anonymous message board
8chanin a manifesto decrying
the ‘‘Hispanic invasion of Tex-
as.’’ It wasthe third mass
shooting this yearthat began
with the posting of a gunman’s
hateful screedon the site, cur-
rentlyoffline following moves
by two Internet-services firms.
In response, Trumpon
Monday took aim at social me-
dia broadly, tasking the Justice
Department to ‘‘workin part-
nership withlocal state and
federal agencies, as well as so-
cial media companies, to devel-
op toolsthat can detect mass
shootersbefore they strike,’’ he
said in a speech.
On Wednesday, Trump
pledged again to ‘‘do some-
thing about’’ online hate, tell-
ing reporters he is ‘‘concerned
for any group of hate, I don’t
like it... whether it’s white su-
premacy or any otherkindof
supremacy.’’
But Trumpmaintainedhis
rhetoric — including attacks on
his politicalfoes,immigrants,
and othergroups— played no
role in coarseningconversa-
tion online and spawningvio-
lence.
‘‘I don’t think my rhetoric
doesat all — I thinkmy rheto-
ric brings people together,’’
Trump said.
Facebook and Google did
not immediately respondto a
request for comment. Twitter
declined to comment.

Te ch firms

to discuss

extremism

on Web

WhiteHouse to

host gathering

ByAlexander Burns
andKatieGlueck
NEWYORKTIMES
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Dem-
ocratic presidentialcandidates
lashed PresidentTrump on
Wednesday withtheirsternest
denunciations yet of his exploi-
tation of racismfor political
purposesand his resistanceto
gun control, in a day of biting
criticism that also highlighted
differencesbetween Democrats
overhowbest to understand
the recent rise of hate crimes in
America.
More than ever, it was clear
that last weekend’s massacres
in El Paso and Dayton,Ohio,
had put Trump on the defensive
and addedfierce new urgency
to Democratic efforts to engi-
neer his ouster. Trumphas not
accountedfor the echoesof his
own rhetoric about immigrants
and minorities in the manifesto
composed by the anti-immi-
grant gunman in Texas, and on
Wednesday morninghe ap-
pearedfar morefocusedon
feudingwithhis criticsin the
Democratic Party and the me-
dia thanon strikinga toneof
healing.
Formervice presidentJoe
Biden, in one of the most fiery
speeches of his campaign so far,
argued that Trump had “fanned
the flames of white supremacy
in this nation” with both explic-
it and implicit language as pres-
ident.
“Trump readily, eagerly at-
tacks Islamic terrorism but can
barelybringhimselfto use the


words‘white supremacy,’ ”
Bidensaid Wednesday after-
nooninBurlington,Iowa.“And
even when he says it, he doesn’t
appear to believe it. He seems
more concerned about losing
their votes thanbeating back
this hateful ideology.”
Speaking in Charleston, S.C.,
at EmanuelAfricanMethodist
Episcopal Church,wherea
whitesupremacist gunman
killed nine blackworshipersin
2015, Senator Cory Booker of
New Jersey also blamed Trump
for encouraging hatred.The
weekend’s violence,he said,
was “sowed by those who spoke
the same words the El Paso
murdererdid, warning of an
‘invasion,’ ” a wordTrumphas
used to describe migrants ap-
proaching the Southern border.
Trumphas emphatically de-
niedthat he is racist, and on
Wednesday, he dismissed re-
porters’ questions about the
role of his rhetoric in dividing
the country, sayinghis lan-

guage “brings people together.”
For bothTrumpandhis
Democratic challengers, the ex-
traordinary focus this week on
whitenationalism, gun vio-
lence, and domestic terror ap-
peared to reframea chaotic
presidentialcampaign — at
least temporarily — as a searing
moral debate about the racial
history and cultural destiny of
the United States.
Trump,who rose to power
railingagainst the country’s
changingethnic and cultural
texture, contendsthat Demo-
crats shouldbe punished for
opposing his immigration poli-
cies and rejecting the values of
the rural whitepeoplewho
make up his politicalbase.
Democrats, meanwhile,are
now arguing in the most explic-
it terms yet that white suprem-
acists are receivingaid and
comfort fromthe president of
the United States.
“His low-energy, vacant-eyed
mouthing of the words written

for him condemning white su-
premacists this weekI don’t be-
lieve fooled anyone, at home or
abroad,” Bidensaid, referringto
Trump’s remarks Monday about
the El Paso shooting.
Insistently branding Trump
as a figurewho offends the na-
tion’s political values, Biden
contrasted the president’s am-
bivalent response to racism and
tragedy with the conduct of his

predecessors— Bill Clinton’s
soothingresponseto the 1995
bombing at a federal building
inOklahomaCity,forinstance,
and George W. Bush’s visit to a
mosque after the terror attacks
of Sept. 11, 2001.
In a biting one-linerthat has
becomea regularjab on the
campaigntrail, Bidensaid to
applause that Trump had “more
in common withGeorge Wal-

lace thanhe doeswithGeorge
Washington.”
Booker eschewed that kind
of nostalgia for the Founding
Fathersin his ownspeech
against violent racism.
He said instead that white
supremacy had been “ingrained
in our politicssinceour found-
ing,” withinthe text of the Dec-
laration of Independence and
the Constitution.

Democratic candidates try to keep Trump on defensive


Biden, Booker


take president to


task for rhetoric


CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/ASSOCIATEDPRESS
FormervicepresidentJoe BidensaidPresidentTrumphad
“fannedtheflamesof whitesupremacy in thisnation.”

‘We Democrats are

notgoingto settle

forhalfmeasures

soRepublicans

canfeelbetter and

try to pushthe

issueof gun

violenceoff to the

side.’

SEN. CHUCK SCHUMER

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