Biden prepares long-awaited executive actions on weapons

President Joe Biden will announce six executive actions on Thursday aimed at tackling the “epidemic” of gun violence in the United States, senior government officials said Wednesday evening, the administration’s first concrete steps to address a problem Biden has struggled with since his time. in the U.S. Senate.

“We know that Americans die from gun violence every day in this country,” an official told reporters in a phone call that predicted the actions of the executive. “Therefore, we pursue an agenda that addresses not only mass shootings, but also community violence that proportionally affects black and brown Americans, domestic violence, and suicide with firearms.”

The actions come as the slow return to normalcy in American life has led to a succession of shootings of mass casualties across the country and as gun control advocates have been anxious for the focus of Biden in the recovery of the pandemic may come at the expense of a problem. which has languished without significant legislative action in Congress for decades.

The orders, according to administration officials, who stressed that they are only “initial” reforms and will likely be followed by additional actions in the coming months, touch on a number of issues related to the purchase of weapons, the publication of “Red Flag” legislation a roadmap for statewide action and data collection on gun trafficking, as well as some specific issues related to recent mass shootings, including the need for weapons to be they need a stabilizer — like the one used in a supermarket in Boulder last month — subject to the requirements of the National Firearms Act. The act requires these weapons to be registered with the federal government.

Actions also include ordering the Justice Department to draft a proposal to stop the proliferation of so-called “ghost weapons,” which are assembled from kits and cannot be tracked by law enforcement. Politician reported this provision for the first time.

Finally, the president will announce his intention to appoint David Chipman as director of the Office of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Chipman, a former office special agent, is a senior adviser to the gun control group founded by former Arizona Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, who nearly died in a 2011 shooting that claimed six lives.

.Source