[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 107 (Tuesday, July 5, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H4200]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BIPARTISAN GUN VIOLENCE PREVENTION MEASURES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Connecticut (Ms. Esty) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ESTY. Mr. Speaker, this House's silence on preventing gun
violence and keeping guns out of the hands of dangerous individuals is
a betrayal of the American people.
Americans are 25 times more likely to be murdered with a gun than in
any of our peer countries; and since the horrific shootings at Sandy
Hook Elementary School in my district, in the last 3\1/2\ years,
100,000 Americans have lost their lives to gun violence. Think about
that--100,000 Americans. That is the size of a good-sized American
city, every single one of them dead because of a gun. And this House--
this House--has done nothing.
We are elected to respond to the needs of the American people. We are
elected to keep Americans safe; and right now, felons, domestic
violence abusers, even suspected terrorists can buy a gun of their
choice without a background check, no questions asked.
And the bad guys are well aware of this big, gaping loophole in our
laws. Here is what an al Qaeda spokesman said in a propaganda video in
2011:
``America is absolutely awash in easily obtainable firearms. You can
go down to a gun show at the local convention center and come away with
a fully automatic assault weapon, without a background check, and most
likely without having to show an identification card. So what are you
waiting for?''
The real question is: What are we, what are we in this Chamber,
waiting for?
We have the no fly, no buy bill, a bipartisan bill to close the
terror loophole, and we have a bipartisan bill to strengthen background
checks so that they apply to all commercial sales of guns.
Now, I know many Americans assume that the laws we have on the books
are strong enough, it is just a question of enforcement; but, sadly,
that is not true. That is not true. Somewhere between 30 and 40 percent
of all gun sales right now do not go through background checks at all,
not at all, so the bad guys just have to go to an unlicensed dealer or
go online.
And let's be very clear. Twenty years ago, when Congress passed the
background check bill, when they passed that bill, people didn't buy
guns online. People didn't buy much of anything online, so Congress
didn't even have it in its head to close a loophole it wasn't aware of.
But it is now this Congress', it is now our job to respond to the needs
of the 100,000 Americans who have died in the last 3\1/2\ years and to
take action to save lives.
Now, no single law--no single law--can end gun violence, but we do
know that laws work. They work, and improved background checks save
lives.
For example, in Connecticut, our permit-to-purchase law has reduced
gun homicides by 40 percent. That translates into 296 lives saved over
a 10-year time period.
In States that have closed background check loopholes, 46 percent
fewer women are killed by domestic partners, and 48 percent fewer on-
duty police officers are shot to death. That is half of those lives
saved. And each one of those lives saved is precious. Each one has a
family. Each one has loved ones. Sometimes we forget that when we are
talking about thousands of this and hundreds of that and millions of
dollars and trillions of dollars. Each and every life is important and
precious, and we are sworn to help the American people.
Here is the bottom line. Better laws work, and background checks work
to save lives.
The bill that the majority is bringing up this week doesn't really
help. In fact, it addresses the terror gap in ways that will hamper the
FBI's efforts to keep us safer.
But let me be very, very clear. Without background checks on every
single gun sale, no matter what we do on closing the terror gap, it
won't matter, because the bad guys will continue avoiding the law,
whether it is domestic violence abusers, felons, the dangerously
mentally ill, or suspected terrorists.
Mr. Speaker, there are steps we can take to make our communities
safer; there are steps we can take to save lives; and I call on this
House to call up, this week, the bipartisan bill to expand background
checks.
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