[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 177 (Tuesday, December 8, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H9030]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MASS SHOOTINGS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, last week's shooting in San Bernardino,
California, happened to be the second shooting of the day and the 355th
of the year, equating to more mass shootings than days in the year. The
social media pages of some of the most influential leaders in Congress
expressed sympathy, thoughts, and prayers to the victims and their
families. But what many failed to express was a commitment to act on
this issue to make mass shootings and horrendous gun violence a far
less common instance in America.
While no grand solution exists to end all gun violence, we know from
the experience of other countries that a combination of small but
practical policy solutions can severely reduce it. But Congress
continues to choose inaction.
Last week, immediately following the devastating news coming out of
Paris and San Bernardino, a majority of Members blocked the House from
even debating bipartisan legislation to close the outrageous loophole
that allows suspects on the FBI's terrorist watch list to buy guns. It
may be hard for some to believe, but in the U.S., individuals on the
Federal terrorist watch list are shockingly still not prohibited from
purchasing firearms.
Quite simply, Mr. Speaker, this means you can be on the terrorist
watch list, considered by the Federal Government to be a potential risk
to the national security of the United States and be prohibited from
boarding a plane, but still have the ability to walk into any Walmart
around the country and purchase a semiautomatic weapon.
Current Federal law prohibits nine categories of dangerous people
from purchasing or owning firearms; suspected terrorists on FBI watch
lists, however, are not one of them. I don't have to explain to Members
of the House the growing terrorist threat that this country is facing
from lone-wolf extremists which are often unpredictable and incredibly
difficult to thwart. Even just one unsophisticated lone-wolf extremist
with a gun can do a remarkable amount of damage.
This isn't some sort of theoretical threat either. A GAO
investigation found that individuals on terrorist watch lists
successfully purchased guns 1,321 times between February 2004 and
December 2010. And that was before the rise of ISIS and their
persistent social media campaign to recruit homegrown terrorists.
Mr. Speaker, I have worked with Congresswoman Lowey in the
Appropriations Committee on a commonsense amendment to allow the
Attorney General to deny firearms sales to individuals known or
suspected to be involved in terrorism. Unfortunately, our attempts to
pass this amendment in committee have been rebuffed every time. But
this week, we have an opportunity to change that. This week, we can
show our enemies, intent on destroying Americans and our way of life,
that Congress cares more about protecting the safety of its citizens
than it does about the gun lobby by finally closing this terror gap in
our gun laws.
The American people, gun owning and not, overwhelmingly support
responsible, commonsense gun reforms. If this isn't the definition of
responsible and commonsense reform, I don't know what is. There is also
widespread support specifically among gun owners for closing the gap.
In 2013, a survey found that 80 percent of non-NRA gun owners support
prohibiting people on the terrorist watch list from obtaining guns. Mr.
Speaker, 71 percent of NRA gun owners support prohibiting people on
this watch list from obtaining guns.
It is naive to think that al Qaeda and ISIS are not paying attention
to what is happening here in Congress. Fixing this loophole is simple,
responsible, and the right thing to do for public safety. Let's not
pass on this critical opportunity to close a dangerous loophole that
threatens our national security.
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