As students staged walkouts nationwide to demand stricter gun control, a month after the school shooting in Florida, Congress offered its modest response: a bill that aims to prevent violence in classrooms – but fails to restrict assault weapons or expand background checks.
The House of Representatives on Wednesday overwhelmingly passed the Stop School Violence Act, in a vote of 407 to 10, marking the first – and perhaps only – action Republican leaders will take in response to the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school in Parkland, which killed 17 and sparked a new youth movement against gun violence. The Senate is considering a similar measure.
'Enough': US students come together in spectacular walkout to end gun violence
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“The action that the House just took is an important first step forward in protecting our children, our teachers and other administrators within our schools,” said John Rutherford, a Republican congressman from Florida and the author of the bill.
Source :- theguardian
The House of Representatives on Wednesday overwhelmingly passed the Stop School Violence Act, in a vote of 407 to 10, marking the first – and perhaps only – action Republican leaders will take in response to the Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school in Parkland, which killed 17 and sparked a new youth movement against gun violence. The Senate is considering a similar measure.
'Enough': US students come together in spectacular walkout to end gun violence
Read more
“The action that the House just took is an important first step forward in protecting our children, our teachers and other administrators within our schools,” said John Rutherford, a Republican congressman from Florida and the author of the bill.
Source :- theguardian
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