UPDATE, 6:00 p.m.
A compromise background check bill failed in the Senate on Wednesday, 54-46, despite a massive public relations and political campaign by President Obama, Vice President Biden, and families of Newtown gun victims. It needed 60 votes to pass.
Speaking in the Rose Garden after the vote, with injured former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and bereaved Newtown families by his side, a visibly angry President Obama said that the legislators who voted against the bill “caved” to political pressure from the minority of Americans who oppose gun reform. “This is a shameful day for Washington,” he said.
The “gun lobby and its allies willfully lied” about the background check bill, Obama said. “There were no coherent arguments as to why we wouldn’t do this,” he said. “It came down to politics.” As Obama said, roughly nine in 10 Americans support expanding background checks on gun buyers. It had the support of Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and former NRA friend Joe Manchin, a Democrat from West Virginia, both of whom own guns and have A ratings from the NRA and who had crafted the compromise bill.
GOPers who voted in favor of the amendment were Sens. Mark Kirk of Illinois, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Susan Collins of Maine and John McCain of Arizona. Democrats who voted against the legislation included Sens. Max Baucus of Montana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mark Begich of Alaska.
The Democrats who voted against the bill live in “gun-friendly” states. Arkansas Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor said Wednesday he would oppose Manchin-Toomey because it’s “too broad, unworkable and unreasonable for hunters and gun owners in our state.” Begich, Pryor and Baucus all face re-election next year.
Moments after the bill was defeated, a voice in the Senate chamber shouted “Shame on you!” The voice was that of Patricia Maisch, the Tucson shooting survivor who wrested a gun clip from Jared Loughner.
Outside the chamber later, she explained, “They need to be ashamed of themselves. I think the ones who voted no…they have no soul. They have no compassion for the experiences that people have lived through, gun violence, who have had a child or a loved one murdered.”









