
WASHINGTON - Wounded former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords appeared as an
unscheduled witness Wednesday at the year's first congressional hearing
on curbing gun violence, adding drama to a session that was already
slated to hear from a top official of the National Rifle Association.
Giffords,
an Arizona Democrat who suffered a severe head wound in a 2011 Tucson
shooting spree that killed six people, was not expected to take
questions, according to a Senate aide who revealed the details only on
condition of anonymity because they had not been announced.
The
dramatic juxtaposition between the NRA and a famous shooting victim set
the stage for the hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, whose
own members are divided. The conflicting approaches among the lawmakers
are a microcosm of the divisive debate at large that gun limits will
face on their way through Congress.
Wednesday's hearing is a
response to the Dec. 14 shooting rampage that killed 20 first-graders
and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., and
transformed gun control into a top-tier issue in the capital.
"The
time has come to change course," Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., one
of Congress' leading gun-control advocates, said Tuesday. "And the time
has come to make people safe."
Feinstein, a Judiciary Committee
member, has already introduced her own legislation banning assault
weapons and magazines of more than 10 rounds of ammunition.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said he would listen to proposals and agreed that reviewing the issue was timely.
"But
I'm a strong supporter of the Second Amendment," he said Tuesday,
citing the constitutional provision that guarantees the right to bear
arms, "and I don't intend to change."
The chairman of the panel,
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said in his prepared opening statement
Wednesday that it is "a simple matter of common sense" that there should
be a strengthening of background checks and that doing so would not
threaten gun owners' rights. The checks are currently required for gun
purchases from licensed dealers but not at gun shows or other private
transaction.
"Let us forego sloganeering, demagoguery and partisan recriminations," he said. "This is too important for that."
Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., indicated that whatever the
committee produced wouldn't necessarily be the final product, saying the
package would be debated by the full Senate and senators would be
allowed to propose "whatever amendments they want that deal with this
issue."
Despite the horrific Newtown slayings, it remains unclear
whether those advocating limits on gun availability will be able to
overcome resistance by the NRA and lawmakers from states where gun
ownership abounds. Question marks include not just many Republicans but
also Democratic senators facing re-election in red-leaning states in
2014. They include Max Baucus of Montana, Mark Begich of Alaska and Mark
Pryor of Arkansas.
Knowing that television cameras would beam
images of the hearing nationally, both sides were drumming up supporters
to attend Wednesday's session.
A page on an NRA-related website
urged backers to arrive two hours early to get seats, bring no signs
and dress appropriately. The liberal BoldProgressives.org urged its
members to attend, saying the NRA "will try to pack the room with their
supporters to deceive Congress into believing they are mainstream."
Before
the hearing began, more than 100 people waited in line hoping to get
in. First were Neeta Datt and Christa Burton, who arrived just before 7
a.m. EST. They work for the Maryland branch of Organizing for Action,
the Obama campaign organization that is now pushing his legislative
agenda.
"There should be more gun control. There's enough violence taking place," said Datt, who lives in Burtonsville, Md..
Earlier
this month, President Barack Obama proposed a package that includes
banning assault weapons, requiring background checks on all firearms
purchases and limiting ammunition magazines to 10 rounds.
Giffords
underwent a lengthy rehabilitation process and has regained some
ability to speak, but has retired from Congress. A gun owner, she and
her husband Mark Kelly, a retired astronaut, have formed a political
action committee called Americans for Responsible Solutions to back
lawmakers who support tighter gun restrictions.
In testimony
prepared for the hearing but released Tuesday, Wayne LaPierre, NRA
executive vice president, said such steps had failed in the past. He
instead voiced support for better enforcement of existing laws, beefing
up school security and strengthening the government's ability to keep
guns from mentally unstable people.
The massacre in Newtown has
also set off a national discussion about mental health care, with
everyone from law enforcement leaders to the gun industry urging
policymakers to focus on the issue as a way to help prevent similar mass
shootings. The issue of mental health has arisen in four recent mass
shootings, including Sandy Hook, the Tucson shooting, the incident in an
Aurora, Colo., movie theater last year and Virginia Tech in 2007.
"Law-abiding
gun owners will not accept blame for the acts of violent or deranged
criminals," LaPierre said in his statement. "Nor do we believe the
government should dictate what we can lawfully own and use to protect
our families."
While not yielding on specifics, much of
LaPierre's statement had a milder tone than other remarks the NRA has
made since Newtown.
That includes an NRA television ad calling
Obama an "elitist hypocrite" for voicing doubts about having armed
school guards while his own children are protected that way at their
school. While Obama's children have Secret Service protection, officials
at their school have said its own guards don't carry guns.
Feinstein
said Tuesday that she will hold her own hearing on gun control because
she was unhappy that three of the five witnesses testifying Wednesday
are "skewed against us."
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