The father of one of the young victims killed in December’s Newtown, Conn., school shooting said Thursday that he’s ashamed with Congress for failing to address an assault weapons ban.
“I’m really ashamed to see that Congress doesn’t have the guts to stand up and make a change and put a ban on these types of weapons,” Neil Heslin said at a press conference alongside Vice President Joe Biden, Mayor Mike Bloomberg, and a handful of other family members of Newtown victims, who had come together to discuss “common sense” gun reforms.
“I ask that Congress makes a change to help prevent this from every happen again,” he added.
Heslin’s emotional remarks came in response to the decision made by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to drop the assault weapons ban from the overall gun legislation package making its way through Congress. Reid said he did so in order to help the overall gun bill’s chances to succeed in Congress.
Biden reiterated his support for such a ban, referring to assault weapons as “weapons of war” and pointing out to critics of the ban that Adam Lanza’s Newtown shooting rampage was powered by that very type of gun. “For all those who say we shouldn’t and can’t ban assault weapons,” Biden said. “How can they say that? Take a look at those 20 beautiful babies.”
Biden also argued that the suggested bans on high capacity magazines and the “weapons of war” could have saved lives in Connecticut and that even just one life saved would make it worthwhile.
He also said he remained hopeful that the assault weapons ban would not die, despite many political predictions in the wake of Reid’s decision to detach the measure.
“I was told in 1992, when I introduced many of these reforms, that there was no way we’d never beat the gun lobby,” he explained. “Well in 1994, we did. In 1994, reason prevailed.”
New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, who has become a major voice and source of support for the gun reform movement, challenged congressional leaders to have the “courage to stand up” on every reform measure being pushed, especially the assault weapons ban.
“It will get a vote,” Bloomberg said. “Everyone’s going to have to stand up and say ‘yay’ or ‘nay’ and the rest of us have to decide just how we feel about those people and their stands.”
The mayor said he remains “optimistic” that Congress will “take action this spring.”









