President Barack Obama’s advisers are finalizing a proposal that would expand background checks on gun sales — without congressional approval.
White House adviser Valerie Jarrett says the president has asked his team to complete a proposal and submit it for his review “in short order.”
She said the recommendations will include measures to expand background checks.
RELATED: Gun control advocates release video calling for end to violence
Jarrett spoke Wednesday night at a vigil for the victims of the Newtown shooting, according to a summary provided by the White House.
“We came together to honor all those who have died from gun violence, and to rededicate ourselves to the urgent work of making ours a safer country,” Jarrett wrote in a statement on the Huffington Post that included her full remarks at the vigil.
“Please know that President Obama shares your pain and frustration, as well as your steadfast determination to keep pushing to make us all safer,” Jarret said at the vigil, according to the post.
“That’s why the President has directed his team, in short order, to finalize a set of recommendations on what more the Administration can do on its own to save lives from gun violence,” she said. “And those recommendations will include making sure we are doing everything we can to keep guns out of the wrong hands, including through expanding background checks.”
At a White House press briefing on Thursday, Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the review Jarrett was referring to “is something the president has been talking about for a couple of months now.”









