Clinton pushing new gun controls after Oregon shooting
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — Days
after a deadly shooting in Oregon, Hillary Rodham Clinton unveiled new
gun control measures Monday aimed at strengthening background checks on
gun buyers and eliminating legal immunity for sellers.
During a
daylong campaign swing through New Hampshire, Clinton proposed a repeal
of legislation that shields gun manufacturers, distributors and dealers
from most liability suits, even in the case of mass shootings like the
one that killed nine people at a community college on Thursday.
Clinton
has made strengthening gun laws a centerpiece of her presidential
campaign, vowing she would use her executive power as president to
expand background checks for sellers at gun shows and online and back
legislation banning domestic abusers from purchasing guns.
She
also backed congressional efforts to stop retailers from selling guns
to people with incomplete background checks, as happened when Dylann
Roof, the man charged in the Charleston church shooting, bought his gun.
"I
will try every way I can to get those guns out of the hands of people
who shouldn't have them," she told voters gathered for a pancake
breakfast town hall meeting in Hollis, New Hampshire. "We need to
prevent these kinds of terrible crimes that are happening."
The
plan marks an effort by Clinton to stake out liberal ground against her
closest rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. While Sanders has wooed the
Democratic base with his liberal positions on issues like income
inequality and college debt, he's struggled to defend a more mixed
record on gun legislation — a reflection, he says, of his rural,
gun-friendly home-state.
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