In his first speech before a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night, Joe Biden urged the legislature to re-issue a ban on so-called “assault weapons” and “high-capacity” magazines while arguing that it “worked before.” This from theblaze.com.
Yet, the most widely-sourced data shows that it did not, in fact, work before.
Biden called on GOP lawmakers in the upper chamber to enact gun reform legislation.
“I don’t want to become confrontational but we need more Senate Republicans to join with the overwhelming majority of their Democratic colleagues, and close loopholes and require background checks to purchase a gun,” he said.
Two House-passed bills that are stalled in the Senate would strengthen background checks and close the so-called Charleston loophole by extending the time federal investigators have to conduct background checks.
Biden also called for a ban on assault weapons and high capacity magazines, echoing comments he made following the recent mass shooting in Boulder, Colo.
But what are the details?
Biden declared gun violence “an epidemic in America” before saying, “In the 1990s, we passed universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that hold 100 rounds that can be fired in seconds.”
He argued, “Talk to most responsible gun owners, most hunters — they’ll tell you there’s no possible justification for having 100 rounds —100 bullets — in a weapon.”
The ban…was the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act, passed as part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement act of 1994 under then-President Bill Clinton.
The law actually banned the “transfer or possession” of ammunition feeding devices that carried more than 10 rounds (not 100), ABC News reported, and the manufacturing of 18 models of specific semiautomatic weapons.
“We need a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines again,” Biden told Congress and the American people on Wednesday. “Don’t tell me it can’t be done. We’ve done it before…and it worked.”
In reaction to Biden’s address, reporter Emily Miller tweeted, “Biden biggest lie of this speech is that the ‘assault weapon ban’ worked. No, the FBI said to let it sunset after ten years because it had no effect on crime.”
The Clinton ban was, indeed, allowed to expire in 2004, and a study from that year using grants from the DOJ found that while gun violence fell by 17% nationwide during the ban — the drop was not linked to the ban.
The analysis explained that hand guns were overwhelmingly the weapon of choice in gun violence in the U.S. both before and after the ban. It stated, “[assault weapons] were used in only a small fraction of gun crimes prior to the ban: about 2% according to most studies and no more than 8%.”
Moreover, the study did note a decrease in crimes involving “assault weapons,” but pointed out that criminals appeared to simply use different weapons. “The decline in [assault weapons] use was offset throughout at least the last 1990s by steady or rising use of other guns equipped with [large capacity magazines] in jurisdictions studied,” the authors wrote.
The study added, “We cannot clearly credit the ban with any of the nation’s recent drop in gun violence.”
The mid-speech Republican response:
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) tweeted her reaction during the speech: “What I want to hear in Biden’s speech is how to solve the border crisis,” she wrote. “What I will hear are plans to spend trillions of dollars and raise taxes.” This from news.yahoo.com.
She added: “What I don’t want to hear are disingenuous calls for unity from this authoritarian leader and his radical administration.”