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Obama: Parents of shooting victims ‘deserve vote’ on gun proposals

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — As Hadiya Pendleton’s parents sat next to the first lady and listened, President Barack Obama told the nation Tuesday that his gun proposals deserve a vote in Congress because of victims such as the slain Chicago teen.

Delivering his State of the Union address, Obama said that in the two months since the school shootings in Newtown, Conn., “more than 1,000 birthdays, graduations and anniversaries have been stolen from our lives by a bullet from a gun.”

“One of those we lost was a young girl named Hadiya Pendleton,” the president said. “She was 15 years old. She loved Fig Newtons and lip gloss. She was a majorette. She was so good to her friends, they all thought they were her best friend.

“Just three weeks ago, she was here, in Washington, with her classmates, performing for her country at my inauguration,” he said. “A week later, she was shot and killed in a Chicago park after school, just a mile away from my house.”

Hadiya’s parents, Nathaniel Pendleton and Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton, guests of first lady Michelle Obama, stood and applauded as the president demanded that Congress consider his gun measures, saying that the parents of Hadiya and other shooting victims “deserve a vote.”

More than 30 gun-violence survivors and loved ones were seated in the chamber during the speech. Many of them were part of a group that traveled to Washington this week to lobby for the president’s gun proposals.

Gun rights advocates have said the president’s gun agenda would unfairly affect law-abiding gun owners and that any government crackdown should target criminals who are violating existing laws.

At a hearing on gun violence a few hours before Obama’s speech, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., asked those in the audience who had been affected by gun violence to stand.

Dozens of people, about half of the crowd, rose in silence.

“Look about this room,” Durbin said. “Understand that the debate we have before us has affected so many lives.”

Whether they watched in Washington or at home in Chicago, the speech was particularly significant to parents who have lost children to violence. By singling out Hadiya, they said, the White House gave special attention to the violence in Chicago that claimed more than 500 lives last year.

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