There was never any question about whether the Senate would have a debate for reducing gun violence. Bills have already passed committee; bipartisan talks have been underway for weeks on various provisions; and Democratic leaders have said all along that a bill was headed to the floor.
The question, rather, was over what the legislation would include and exclude.
We learned this week, for example, that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) intended to advance a bill without an assault-weapons ban, and there was some talk in recent days that a provision on universal background checks, despite extraordinary public support, might get scuttled, too. Last night, however, Reid made a statement that brought the debate into sharper focus.
“Later tonight, I will start the process of bringing a bill to reduce gun violence to the Senate floor. This bill will include the provisions on background checks, school safety and gun trafficking reported by the Judiciary Committee. I hope negotiations will continue over the upcoming break to reach a bipartisan compromise on background checks, and I am hopeful that they will succeed. If a compromise is reached, I am open to including it in the base bill. But I want to be clear: in order to be effective, any bill that passes the Senate must include background checks.









