Vice President Joe Biden vowed not to give up the fight to pass a new assault weapons ban, ahead of a meeting with New York City’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
“I’m still pushing that it pass—we are still pushing that it pass. The same thing was told to me when the first assault weapons ban in ’94 was attached to the Biden crime bill, that it couldn’t possibly pass. It was declared dead several times,” Biden told NPR.
But, it looks like an uphill battle. NRA fundraising last month was the highest it’s been in decades, $1.6 million dollars, according to Politico and FEC reports. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid moved the assault weapons ban out of the bills he’s bringing to the Senate floor, saying it only had 40 votes.
“What happened?” Chris Jansing asked Democratic congressman Charles Rangel, D-NY.
“I’m ashamed to admit it, but it’s politics and it’s money. The National Rifle Association has taken this position… but it’s really basically the absence of the voices of good people. I cannot believe that politicians are afraid of the NRA—if they thought for one minutes that the churches and synagogue and the priests and the ministers were saying, hey, do the right thing, we have your back,” Rangel said on Jansing & Co.









