Hillary Clinton Unveils Plan for Major New Gun Restrictions

Days after a deadly shooting in Oregon, Hillary Rodham Clinton unveiled new gun control measures Monday aimed at strengthening background checks on gun buyers and eliminating legal immunity for sellers.

During a daylong campaign swing through New Hampshire, Clinton proposed a repeal of legislation that shields gun manufacturers, distributors and dealers from most liability suits, even in the case of mass shootings like the one that killed nine people at a community college on Thursday.

Clinton has made strengthening gun laws a centerpiece of her presidential campaign, vowing she would use her executive power as president to expand background checks for sellers at gun shows and online and back legislation banning domestic abusers from purchasing guns.

She also backed congressional efforts to stop retailers from selling guns to people with incomplete background checks, as happened when Dylann Roof, the man charged in the Charleston church shooting, bought his gun.

"I will try every way I can to get those guns out of the hands of people who shouldn't have them," she told voters gathered for a pancake breakfast town hall meeting in Hollis, New Hampshire. "We need to prevent these kinds of terrible crimes that are happening."

The plan marks an effort by Clinton to stake out liberal ground against her closest rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. While Sanders has wooed the Democratic base with his liberal positions on issues like income inequality and college debt, he's struggled to defend a more mixed record on gun legislation — a reflection, he says, of his rural, gun-friendly home-state.

After the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2013, Sanders backed all the Democratic gun bills brought up in Congress. But in 1993, he voted against the landmark Brady handgun bill, which imposed a five-day waiting period for gun purchasers, and he backed the 2005 legislation granting legal immunity to many in the gun industry.

Sanders now says he supports banning assault weapons and closing the so-called "gun show loophole" that exempts private, unlicensed gun sales from background checks.

Clinton declined to directly go after that record on Monday morning, saying she'd let "Senator Sanders talk about himself."

But she said she wasn't surprised by his recent rise in New Hampshire polls, mentioning his long tenure representing a neighboring state.

"I really believe this is great for the Democrats and this election," she said of the unexpectedly competitive contest. "We really want to turn out as many people as possible."

Clinton has emerged as one of the fiercest proponents of tougher gun control after a series of shootings over the past several months has reignited debate over gun laws in the presidential campaign.

Not all questions were about guns. 

Asked during Monday's town hall event if she'd consider serving as vice president, Clinton laughed and offered a short answer: "Hypothetically speaking, no."

She also expressed frustration ahead of an appearance at an upcoming congressional hearing on the Benghazi, Libya, attacks that killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. Clinton said the panel investigating her response to the September 2012 attacks while secretary of state had been politicized.

"This committee was set up, as they have admitted, for the purpose of making a partisan political issue out of the deaths of four Americans," she said. "I would never have done that, and if I were president and there were Republicans or Democrats thinking about that, I would have done everything to shut it down."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us