For proponents of gun reforms, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is an unmovable villain standing in the way of every legislative effort to improve public safety. For opponents of reforms, the Kentucky Republican is a reliable ally, who can always be counted on to bury gun legislation regardless of merit.
Both contingents were probably a little surprised yesterday when McConnell opened the door to new legislation using rhetoric that he hasn’t used before.
“Those are two items that for sure will be front and center as we see what we can come together on and pass” the Republican leader said on a Kentucky radio station, speaking about a bipartisan bill from Sens. Joe Manchin, D-Va., and Pat Toomey, R-Pa., which would expand background checks to cover online and gun show sales, and the so-called red flag law, legislation that allows courts and police to confiscate firearms from people who are believed to be a threat to themselves or others.
“But what we can’t do, is fail to pass something. By just locking up, and failing to pass, that’s unacceptable,” McConnell said, marking a significant departure from his past handling of gun legislation in the wake of tragedies.
The Senate GOP leader went on to note that he’d spoken about the issue with Donald Trump, and the president is “anxious to get an outcome.”
It’s hard not to think of poor Charlie Brown, standing on the field, wondering if this time Lucy will actually let him kick the football without yanking it away at the last moment.
The circumstances, after all, are familiar. Mass shootings shock the national conscience and spur demands for action, Republican politicians will, in the immediate aftermath of the violence, routinely suggest they’re willing to consider reforms, giving hope to progressive activists.
And then time elapses, headlines change, attention shifts, and GOP officials cooperate with groups like the NRA to ensure very little happens.
Will this time be any different? I’m reluctant to guess, though it’s worth noting for context that McConnell has spent several decades standing in the way of gun reforms. I’m not aware, however, of the Kentucky senator ever saying, “What we can’t do is fail to pass something.”
Maybe McConnell’s had a sincere change of heart; maybe he’s afraid of his party losing suburban voters; maybe he wants to hand Trump a “win” on a high-profile issue.
Or perhaps the Republican leader is playing the role of Lucy, and Charlie Brown would be foolish to feel any sense of optimism.
Looking ahead, there are three possible outcomes:









