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Gun debate begins in Congress, but both sides start out far apart

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Giffords’ husband, retired astronaut Mark Kelly, said better background checks could have stopped the Tucson shooter, Jared Loughner, from buying a gun.

“My wife would not have been sitting here today if we had stronger background checks,” said Kelly, a gun owner.

Following the hearing, the couple met at the White House with President Barack Obama, who has made gun control a centerpiece of his second term. Obama will continue to press his case on guns in Minneapolis on Monday.

In an interview Wednesday on Telemundo, Spanish language TV, the president said, “What we’re looking for here has nothing to do with taking away peoples’ guns … We’re talking about some common-sense things.”

The shock of the bloodshed in Newtown, which followed a rash of recent mass shootings, galvanized supporters of gun restrictions and prompted new legislation in Congress from Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that would ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, as well as tightening background checks.

But gun rights advocates have mobilized, too, opposing efforts to curb guns or ammunition and promoting the enforcement of existing laws, prosecuting gun crimes and focusing on mental health issues.

“This is such a hard debate because people have such fixed positions,” Feinstein said.

Even if her bill moves to the floor, and there’s no guarantee it will, Republicans and Democrats are divided on its core components. No Republican senator has expressed support for Feinstein’s bill, while the Democratic members of the committee included four of the co-sponsors. They even disagree about some of the smaller things, such as whether existing laws are used to the fullest to prosecute criminals.

The political calendar could also affect the debate, as the 2014 midterm elections loom. Despite the Newtown tragedy, guns and the Second Amendment hold a firm place in the culture, and the issue could prove thorny next year for a number of Democrats who come from Republican-leaning states.

Still, a January poll by the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health found that 69 percent of those surveyed favored a ban on military-style assault rifles such as those used in recent murder sprees at an Aurora, Colo., theater and at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.

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