Tearful Obama calls for 'meaningful action' after school shooting
President Obama: "Heal the broken heated and bind up their wounds".
Choking
up and wiping away tears, President Barack Obama said on Friday that
"our hearts are broken" for the victims of a deadly shooting rampage at a
Connecticut elementary school and called for "meaningful action" to
curb gun violence.
"We've endured too many of these
tragedies in the past few years," Obama said during a somber televised
appearance in the White House briefing room just hours after one of the
worst mass shootings in US history.
Pausing to collect
himself as he expressed "overwhelming grief" as a parent, Obama deplored
the "heinous" attack by a heavily armed gunman who killed at least 27
people, including 20 children and himself, at a school in Newtown,
Connecticut.
Obama, who has responded to previous shooting
massacres by citing the need for a national conversation about gun
violence, again stopped short of calling for tougher gun-control laws,
considered politically risky in a country known for its flourishing gun
culture.
But, little more than a month after his decisive
re-election to a second term, he suggested that in the aftermath of
Friday's tragedy he might be open to considering a less cautious
approach.
"As a country, we have been through this too many times," Obama said, ticking off a list of recent shootings.
"And
we're going to have to come together and take meaningful action to
prevent more tragedies like this, regardless of the politics," he said,
in an apparent reference to the influence of the National Rifle
Association, a powerful pro-gun lobby, in Congress.
Obama
avoided making direct calls for gun control during his bitterly fought
campaign for a second term, which he secured in the November 6 election.
But
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who co-chairs a coalition of
mayors on gun-control policy, urged the Democratic president to tackle
the issue despite likely opposition from Republicans who control the US
House of Representatives.
"We have heard all the rhetoric
before. What we have not seen is leadership - not from the White House
and not from Congress. That must end today," Bloomberg said in a
statement
Outside the White House gates, about 200 people
rallied Friday evening in favor of gun restrictions. "No more lives
shattered by gun violence," read one placard.
PAUSE IN PARTISAN BICKERING
Meantime,
partisan bickering in Washington, divided as much as ever before by a
battle over a looming "fiscal cliff" of tax hikes and spending cuts, was
put on hold on Friday amid mourning for the dead at Sandy Hook
Elementary School.
Obama ordered flags at federal buildings
to be lowered to half-mast and he canceled an official trip to Maine
scheduled for Wednesday. There was no immediate word from the White
House on when the president might visit Connecticut to console grieving
families.
"Our hearts are broken today, for the parents,
and grandparents, sisters and brothers of these little children and for
the families of the adults who were lost," Obama said, his voice
cracking with emotion.
"Our hearts are broken for the
parents of the survivors as well, for as blessed as they are to have
their children home tonight, they know that their children's innocence
has been torn away from them too early and there are no words that will
ease their pain," he said.
Obama, who has two young
daughters, looked grim when he entered the briefing room, and he paused
and blinked hard after mentioning the ages of the dead children - from 5
to 10 years old.
"I know there's not a parent in America who doesn't feel the same overwhelming grief that I do," he said.
Obama
raised a finger and dabbed at the corner of his eye on several
occasions. While speaking, he set his jaw several times. At the end of
his statement, there was a tear visible below his left eye and that side
of his face was slightly wet.
Obama has issued public statements before in the aftermath of shooting massacres.
Following
the killing of six people at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin in early
August, he said such incidents should prompt soul-searching by all
Americans.
But when asked then whether he would push for
further gun-control measures in the wake of the shootings, Obama said
only that he wanted to bring together leaders at all levels of American
society to examine ways to curb gun violence.
The president
has said he supports the reinstatement of a ban on assault weapons
sales, but he did little in his first term to advance it.
Asked
about gun control on Friday, White House spokesman Jay Carney told
reporters that the immediate aftermath of the Connecticut shooting was
not the right time for policy debates.
No comments:
Post a Comment