[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 107 (Tuesday, July 5, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H4199]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PASS GUN SAFETY LEGISLATION AND GIVE D.C. THE VOTE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
the District of Columbia (Ms. Norton) for 5 minutes.
Ms. NORTON. Mr. Speaker, anyone who thought the Democrats would go
away after we were driven to a sit-in on the House floor for gun safety
legislation learned differently very soon after we got home on
Wednesday, June 29, when events were held all across the country on a
National Day of Action for Gun Violence Prevention. We served notice.
Yes, there have been moments of outrage and sometimes we have not
kept up the battle unceasingly. Watch us this time.
I am very pleased that our very effective police chief, Cathy Lanier,
came with me to a roundtable where we heard not only from her, but from
residents of the District of Columbia who have experienced the
incredible heartache and throbbing agony of the loss of a loved one to
gun violence.
This morning, unstimulated by me, parents organized themselves to
come to the Capitol at 9 a.m. They call themselves D.C. Moms and Dads
for Rational Gun Safety Legislation. They are a group of spontaneously
formed District of Columbia parents who lack voting representation in
the Congress, although they pay the highest taxes per capita of any
Americans. They do not have the final vote on the House floor, and they
have no Senators.
They wanted to come and show their support for national gun
legislation to prevent gun violence in our city and our country. They
came when, the week before, I had just fought off three amendments in
the House Rules Committee to undermine D.C.'s gun laws with an attempt
to erase some of those laws.
It is interesting that, in the Rules Committee, I was able to keep
those Republican amendments to take away our gun laws from being made
in order. I think it is because the Rules Committee took place only
days after Orlando, and even Republicans didn't have the nerve to
authorize gun legislation so close to the Orlando gun massacre. Is that
what it is going to take? Or will it take the persistence that you saw
when Democrats had no alternative but to sit on this hard floor just
before recess?
Now, the Republicans have gotten the permission of the NRA to include
a gun bill in a pending bill. No wonder, it makes things worse. Now you
would have to go before a judge before you can get someone off the no-
fly list, instead of depending on the slow administrative process, you
would go through the much slower judicial process. Thank you for
nothing. It certainly won't satisfy us or the American people.
We who live in your Nation's Capital, need national gun legislation
to keep guns from flowing in from weak gun jurisdictions, and we need
Congress to leave our gun safety laws alone.
Without fail, every single year, I have to drive back attempts to
overturn our gun laws. I just described three that were in the Rules
Committee before we left that I was able to drive back because of
Orlando.
Yes, I am proud that the Nation's Capital has the strongest gun laws
in the country, as well it might. Controversial world figures walk our
streets and visit our restaurants. Weak gun laws we do not need in this
Capital.
We have effective enforcement. We have good relations among Chief
Lanier and her police force and our residents. But we are still at the
mercy of a Congress, which will not do its job.
During our House sit-in, I left the floor to go to a press conference
held by the Mayor and the police chief, displaying AK-47s and other
guns illegal in the District of Columbia but that you can simply go to
a gun show and buy, undermining our gun laws.
Our gun problem in cities like ours and many cities and jurisdictions
across the country are not local problems. They are a national problem.
That is why you see us demanding universal background checks. That is
why we are demanding that Congress stop censuring the CDC from studying
gun laws.
I thank the moms and dads and kids who marched to the Capitol today
for overriding their denial of a vote to come here. You sent a dual
message: pass gun safety legislation, and give D.C. the vote.
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