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Obama makes gun control top priority

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“The politics are absolutely gruesome,” said Paul Begala, a former Clinton adviser who worked to re-elect Obama in 2012. “In many areas, the country is moving left, certainly in terms of gay rights, and on issues like marijuana. But from the time I was working with President Clinton, we’ve moved significantly to the right on gun control.”

Patrick J. Griffin, a Clinton White House aide who was at the center of the fight over the 1994 crime bill, called it “probably tougher than health care” to get through Congress.

A handful of pro-gun-rights Democrats have stepped forward this week to suggest the need for tougher gun laws or at least a need for what Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia called “a conversation on everything.”

Republicans, however, have largely remained silent, making the Republican-controlled House of Representatives a particular stumbling block.

Asked whether GOP lawmakers would soon speak out in favor of tighter laws, Republican strategist Whit Ayres said no, “because they don’t believe that more gun laws are likely to stop gun violence committed by mentally ill people.”

Obama alluded to the daunting legislative math he faces by noting that many House Republicans represent districts that GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney won last month. Indeed, a majority of the new House — 219 representatives out of 435 — will be Republicans from districts that Obama failed to carry, noted David Wasserman of the Cook Political Report.

In his remarks, Obama pledged to push ahead regardless of that political arithmetic. “The fact that this problem is complex can no longer be an excuse for doing nothing,” he said.

He called on the new Congress to vote “in a timely manner” on banning the sale of assault-style weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips and on a requirement for background checks before all gun purchases. Those proposals, which Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and others plan to introduce as early as next month, have repeatedly been blocked in Congress by the gun lobby and its allies.

The president also said the Senate should confirm a permanent director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, a position that has been filled on an interim basis over the last six years because of opposition from gun rights forces.

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