The grief of Newtown has not faded.
Neil Heslin, whose 6-year-old son was murdered in the December mass shooting in Connecticut, praised President Obama for urging Congress on Thursday to pass gun-control legislation, but added that his own pain is “never going to go away.”
An emotional Heslin asked lawmakers to ban assault weapons and high capacity magazines. All of the victims killed in Newtown were killed with a Bushmaster .223 caliber model XM-15 rifle, which was loaded with a 30-round capacity magazine.
Those weapons “don’t have a place on the streets, they don’t have a place in our schools,” he told Hardball‘s Chris Matthews. “And I just want to see that this doesn’t happen to another family or another parent, what I’m going through and what Newtown is going through.”
Heslin was in the audience when Obama pushed the Senate to pass a gun control measure next month. “Less than 100 days ago [the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting] happened and the entire country was shocked,” said Obama. “Shame on us if we’ve forgotten.”
According to a recent CBS News poll, support for gun control legislation has dropped 10 points from the days immediately following the shooting in Newtown. Then, 57% backed stronger new gun controls, compared to 47% now.








