The Machin/Toomey proposal to expand background checks on firearm purchases was clearly the highest-profile gun measure considered in the Senate yesterday, but it wasn’t the only one. In all, seven separate amendments were brought to the floor, each needing 60 votes. All seven failed, including measures on magazine size and straw-purchasing penalties.
In an ironic twist, of the seven amendments, the one that received the highest number of votes (57) was Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn’s (R-Texas) proposal on interstate reciprocity for concealed-carry permits. In other words, four months after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary, one of the more popular ideas was weakening limits on guns.
Today, the remaining two amendments were actually approved. Sen. John Barrasso’s (R-Wyo.) amendment to punish state or local governments that that disclose gun owners’ information passed 67 to 30, followed by an unusually lopsided vote.
The Senate voted 95-2 for an amendment to the gun control bill that would address mental health issues.









