Donald Trump published a pair of curious tweets this morning, suggesting policymakers could approve a “strong” background-checks bill, “perhaps marrying this legislation with desperately needed immigration reform.”
There’s been no further clarification on what the president might have been talking about. Was he suggesting some kind of trade-off with Democrats on unrelated issues? Was he trying to draw some kind of connection between the native-born white gunmen and immigration? Perhaps this was some kind of conditional warning in which Trump was saying he’ll sign a background-check bill only if Congress meets his demands on immigration policy?
Whatever he meant, every time the president expresses support for a new policy on background checks, reform advocates wonder if maybe there’s a chance for progress. Invariably, that door quickly shuts.
As the Associated Press reported this morning, Trump has “reneged on previous pledges to strengthen gun laws.”
After other mass shootings he called for strengthening the federal background check system, and in 2018 he signed legislation to increase federal agency data sharing into the system. But he has resisted Democratic calls to toughen other gun control laws. […]









