Democratic lawmakers and families of gun violence victims came together at the Capitol Building Wednesday with a unified and searing promise to carry on the fight for stronger gun control legislation.
“How many more must die before our Congress takes action?” asked Po Murray, vice chair and co-founder of the Newtown Action Alliance, formed after 26 people–including 20 children–were massacred at Sandy Hook Elementary School last December.
The press conference, scheduled to commemorate the nine-month anniversary of Newtown, took on a more powerful emotional pitch given its mile-and-a-half proximity to the Washington Navy Yard, where on Monday a lone gunman shot down 12 people before being killed himself in a shootout with police.
Steps away from the conference room where the presser was held, House members on Tuesday observed a moment of silence in memory of the Navy Yard victims. But a day later, gun control advocates made clear those expressions of sympathy were not enough.
“We’re almost unworthy of that tradition to think the moment of silence should make us feel better,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. “The fact is we don’t need a moment of silence; we need a day of action.”
Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal echoed that indictment of his colleagues, who last April failed reach the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster on a bipartisan bill that would have strengthened background checks for gun buyers. In the Republican-controlled House, Speaker Boehner hasn’t put a similar background check bill on the floor for a vote.
“Shootings in America are becoming the new normal,” said Blumenthal. “The risk is that we accept the banality of this evil in our society.”
Almost every speaker on Wednesday repeated the figure 8,000–the number of gun-related deaths recorded by Slate’s gun tracker since Newtown. Sen. Chris Murphy, also from Connecticut, pledged that if that number couldn’t move Congress to act on background checks–something that polls show Americans strongly support–then the ballot box would.
“There is one thing that can fix a broken democracy, and that’s elections,” said Murphy, to roaring applause.
That theory took a blow in Colorado last week, when two Democratic state senators who supported stricter gun control measures were ousted in an unprecedented recall campaign, highlighting the enduring might of the National Rifle Association to galvanize gun-rights supporters.









