President Obama, standing with families of victims of gun
violence, Thursday made an emotional appeal for Congress to act on gun control.
"Shame on us if we've forgotten," Obama said in the White
House East Room referring to the 26 children and adults killed by a gunman at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown,
Conn., on Dec. 14.
"It's been barely 100 days since 20 innocent children and six
brave educators were taken from us by gun violence – including Grace McDonnell
and Lauren Rousseau and Jesse Lewis, whose families are here today," the
president said.
"I haven't forgotten those kids. Shame on us if we've
forgotten."
Also there was the mother of Hadiya Pendleton, the 15-year-old honor
student killed in January at a park less than a mile from Obama's home in
Chicago. The cheerleader had attended Obama's second inaugural in Washington.
"Everything they lived for and hoped for, taken away in an
instant," he said. "We have moms on this stage whose children were
killed as recently as 35 days ago."
Seeking to build momentum for new gun control measures to be debated in
the Senate, Obama said that's why in January he asked Vice President Biden to
lead a task force to develop common-sense proposals to "reduce the
epidemic of gun violence and keep our kids safe."
The measures include expanded background checks on firearm purchases,
tougher penalties on straw purchases of firearms and new funding for school
security.
"Why wouldn't we want to make it more difficult for a dangerous
person to get his or hand on a gun?" he asked. "Why wouldn't we want
to close the loophole that allows as many as 40 percent of all gun purchases to
take place without a background check?"
The White House event came on a "National Day to Demand
Action" in which gun-control advocates planned more than 140 public events
in 29 states to call for universal background checks.
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