Politics & Government

President Barack Obama Unveils Sweeping Gun Control Reform Proposals

Obama unveiled a number of recommendations based off work done by a task force, and also issued 23 executive actions that don't require congressional approval.

 

Following a series mass shootings last year, President Barack Obama on Wednesday proposed comprehensive gun policy reform that included a series of executive actions.

The set of proposals is based on a month-long review by a task force spearheaded by Vice President Joe Biden. The proposals address giving addtional tools to law enforcement, school safety, mental health and the availability of dangerous firearms and ammunition.

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Under the proposals the president is recommending:

  • universal criminal background checks for private and retail gun sales;
  • reinstating the ban on military assault weapons;
  • a limit on ammunition magazines;
  • more gun research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
  • helping schools develop emergency plans;
  • adding more resource officers to schools;
  • adding more police officers on the street;
  • new gun trafficking laws and more.

The package will cost about $500 million, reported the Huffington Post.

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Obama said in a Wednesday press conference that most Americans agree with universal background checks. He also said that more than 40 percent of gun purchases are done without background checks.

Part of his plan also includes appointing Todd Jones as director for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Jones has been the acting director since 2011. The ATF has gone six years without a permanent director, according to TMP Livewire.

Many of Obama’s recommendations require Congressional approval, which is why he signed 23 executive actions that don’t require approval and take effect immediately.

The executive actions call for federal agencies to be required to hand over relevant data for a background check system; provide law enforcement, first responders and school officials with better training for active shooting situations; gun violence and prevention research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that includes video game research; and more.

Biden’s task force is comprised of 31 elected officials who met with 229 organizations from gun advocacy groups, law enforcement, sporting groups, and many others.


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