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Biden condemns ‘international embarrassment’ of US gun violence as White House unveils executive orders

 (AP)
(AP)

Joe Biden has dismissed “phony arguments” that his administration is stripping Second Amendment protections as the White House unveils six executive orders to combat gun violence and urges Congress to move on several pieces of legislation.

“The idea is just bizarre to suggest the things we’re recommending are against the Constitution,” the president said from remarks at the White House Rose Garden on Thursday.

“Gun violence in this country is an epidemic and an international embarrassment,” he said.

The president’s first executive actions targeting gun violence follow the mass killings of 10 people at a supermarket in Boulder, Colorado, less than a week after eight people were killed during a shooting spree at three Atlanta-area spas, prompting officials and communities across the US to once again reckon with the nation’s overwhelming rates of gun violence and the politically volatile subject of gun control.

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The shootings followed the deaths of least 43,436 Americans who died from gun violence, including more than 24,000 suicide deaths, in 2020, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

Roughly 11,000 Americans have died from gun violence in 2021, according to US Attorney General Merrick Garland, who joined Mr Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday.

Mr Biden said he worked with Mr Garland to draft “immediate and concrete actions” to combat the crisis.

One action orders the Justice Department to issue a rule to stop the proliferation of so-called “ghost guns” within 30 days.

Within the next 60 days, the Justice Department must also issue a rule to align pistol-stabilising braces with the National Firearms Act, which requires potential owners to pay additional fees and submit identifying information to federal authorities.

The suspect in the Boulder killings appeared to have used a pistol with an arm brace, which can make a firearm more stable and accurate, while also remaining partially concealed.

Within 60 days, the Justice Department also must model “red flag” legislation for states, while Mr Biden urges Congress to pass a measure at the federal level, along with several pieces of gun control legislation already supported by the Democratically controlled House of Representatives.

“Enough prayers,” Mr Biden said. “Time for action.”

The president has also ordered a comprehensive Justice Department review on the state of firearms trafficking and nominated gun safety advocate David Chipman to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

Mr Biden has also encouraged state officials to use Medicaid to pay for violence intervention programmes, and issued a suite of changes across 26 programmes in five federal agencies to support an “evidence-based community violence interventions” agenda.

The administration’s sweeping infrastructure plan proposes that Congress approve $5 billion over eight years to support community violence intervention initiatives – making the case that community health, safety and remediation is critical to rebuilding economies, particularly in neighbourhoods feeling lasting and intertwined impacts of violence and poverty.

“The idea we have so many people dying every single day … is a blemish on our character and as a nation,” Mr Biden said.

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