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Bipartisan Group Of Senators Urges Trump To Toughen Gun Background Checks - Breaking News

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For any copyright, please send me a message.  WASHINGTON ― A bipartisan trio of senators urged President Donald Trump on Wednesday to expand background checks on gun purchases in a roughly 40-minute conference call they described as productive and “very encouraging.”  However, Trump didn’t indicate on the call any preference for legislative proposals toward curbing gun violence and said the lawmakers “should be able to hear back from his staff tomorrow” on the path forward, according to Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), one of the senators who participated in the call.  Trump has expressed interest in gun control proposals in the past, often immediately following a horrific mass shooting, only to reverse himself days later.  The discussion with the president focused on expanding background checks on gun purchases conducted via commercial sales ― including Internet sales and gun shows ― but not private sales. The House earlier this year passed a universal background check bill toughening federal scrutiny on all gun purchases, but it has faced stiff opposition in the GOP-controlled Senate.  Manchin, along with Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), the other two senators on the call, have played key roles in crafting gun control legislation in Congress in recent years.  Toomey told reporters afterward that Trump didn’t offer any commitments on what proposals he could support and that the timeline on moving forward could slip into next week.  Murphy said the group got “into the details for the first time with the president about some of the ways that we could find a bill that will attract support on both sides.” The Connecticut Democrat, who has been a vocal proponent of gun control since the 2012 Newtown elementary school shooting in his state, said he was holding out hope about the prospect of a compromise but that time was quickly running out.  Trump has oscillated widely over the last month about potential legislative solutions on the topic of gun violence in the wake of mass shootings in Texas and Ohio. He remained mercurial about the state of negotiations with lawmakers in remarks at the White House on Wednesday afternoon.  “There are a lot of things under discussion. Some things will never happen and some things can really very much,” Trump said.  Republicans have made it clear they will proceed with a debate on gun legislation only if it has the backing of Trump, who would need to sign it to make it the law. Many of their members, however, remain skeptical about proposals expanding background checks — arguing they won’t do much to prevent mass shootings.  The gunman who killed seven people and injured more than 20 in an Aug. 31 shooting rampage in and around Odessa, Texas, however, purchased his weapon from a

Donald Trump,Gun Control,chris murphy,Joe Manchin,Pat Toomey,

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