The nation has mourned one major mass shooting after another over the last few years, but they didn’t persuade enough lawmakers in Washington, D.C., to pass and enact any new gun legislation. All were hundreds or thousands of miles away from the halls of Congress.
Monday’s shooting tragedy that killed 13 people, including a lone gunman, took place at the Washington Navy Yard, just a mile and a half from the United States Capitol building. This physical closeness, one senator said, caused a number of his colleagues to become “totally shaken.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told MSNBC’s Craig Melvin Tuesday that people he works with were overwhelmed “by the physical proximity and the senselessness and the randomness of this violence.” He’s hoping that the killings will be enough to reinvigorate the charge for new gun legislation at the federal level and sway lawmakers who weren’t convinced before.
“My hope is that this senseless killing will help us break through the gridlock that so obstructed us the last time,” he added. “We lost that vote in April, but that was not the last vote.”
Blumenthal, one of the Senate’s most vocal advocates for gun reform since the Newtown, Connecticut shooting tragedy, also told Melvin that the violence at the Navy Yard brought back memories from his home state of the deep sadness from nine months ago.
“It is the accumulation of these horrific tragedies,” he said. “Yesterday brought back many of those terrible memories when I went to the Sandy Hook fire house and saw the parents and loved ones of those beautiful children who were killed in Sandy Hook. I hope that this tragedy will elicit the same reaction on the part of the American people that Janis Orlowski had when she said she was sickened by it.”
Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, a Democrat representing the District of Columbia, is planning a moment of silence on the House floor Tuesday night to remember the Navy Yard victims. While the shooting itself was frightening, she mentioned that its location was supposed to be a very secure facility.
“We’ve seen that you can get guns into a school, but we didn’t expect that you could get guns into one of the most secure facilities in the United States. That guns proliferate, they’re bound to get someone you don’t want them to get.”








