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Biden launches gun-control campaign with speech to mayors

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“High-capacity magazines don’t have a practical sporting purpose or hunting purpose. As one hunter told me, if you got 12 rounds, it means you’ve already missed the deer 11 times,” Biden said. “You should pack the sucker in at that point.”

But Biden spent much less time speaking about an assault weapons ban, which will face stiff opposition in Congress. He also contended that the gun industry would exploit any loopholes in a new law to continue to manufacture the weapons.

“I know as well as anyone, having written the first assault weapons ban, that the industry will do whatever it can to get around it, and they’ll figure out a way,” the vice president said. “But I also know we have to try.”

Chris Koos, the mayor of Normal, Ill., said a “surprising” number of his constituents have voiced support for an assault weapons ban. “I thought there’d be some pushback,” Koos said, in his city of 52,000 people in a rural region. But he said Vietnam veterans have been particularly outspoken in their support for a ban, having used similar firearms in combat.

“They know what they are for,” Koos said.

But Betsy Price, mayor of Fort Worth, Texas, said most residents of her city were opposed to bans on assault weapons or high-capacity magazines.

“Good, outstanding citizens really want to keep their guns,” she said.

But Price praised the president’s efforts to improve mental health treatment and record-keeping, especially the executive action informing health care providers that they are not prevented from sharing relevant information about people who are prohibited from owning guns for mental health reasons.

Biden took pains to assert that the White House respected the Second Amendment.

Omaha Mayor Jim Suttle said that message may resonate in his state. “Nebraska is certainly a very, very conservative state. A red state, solid. But when you start polling people, particularly my constituents, you start seeing there is a public concern about the gun violence,” he said.

“That’s what the vice president is trying to do,” Suttle said. “He’s saying, ‘Hey, the Second Amendment is your right. It’s our right. Let’s move on to the other aspects.’”

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