Screw him. Why bother? No, no, just hell no, period.
The National Rifle Association believes it won’t get a fair shake as
Vice President Joe Biden doggedly heads a federal effort to stem gun
violence with tough new laws following the Newtown elementary school
massacre.
“This is somebody who’s bombastic and really does think that anybody who disagrees with him is not only wrong but crazy. That’s his style,” NRA president David Keene told The New York Times.
Biden, who owns two shotguns himself, is currently drafting legislation for President Barack Obama that is expected to call for a strong ban on assault weapons.
And lawmakers say if anybody can get the nation moving on a such a ban in the next few weeks, it’s Biden.
“I really do believe there isn’t anybody in America who has a better chance of getting this done by Jan. 15 than he does,’’ former Sen. Ted Kaufman of Delaware, a Biden advisor, told the Times.
“Not just because of his background in guns, but because he’s not politically intimidated by the NRA, to put it mildly.”
Biden has roiled the NRA by not reaching out to the group, a snub the pro-gun organization says shows contempt for gun owners and their rights under the Second Amendment.
Biden helped pass an assault-weapons ban in 1994, but the law had a 10-year expiration clause and contained a compromise that allowed certain types of assault-type firearms to continue to be sold.
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“This is somebody who’s bombastic and really does think that anybody who disagrees with him is not only wrong but crazy. That’s his style,” NRA president David Keene told The New York Times.
Biden, who owns two shotguns himself, is currently drafting legislation for President Barack Obama that is expected to call for a strong ban on assault weapons.
And lawmakers say if anybody can get the nation moving on a such a ban in the next few weeks, it’s Biden.
“I really do believe there isn’t anybody in America who has a better chance of getting this done by Jan. 15 than he does,’’ former Sen. Ted Kaufman of Delaware, a Biden advisor, told the Times.
“Not just because of his background in guns, but because he’s not politically intimidated by the NRA, to put it mildly.”
Biden has roiled the NRA by not reaching out to the group, a snub the pro-gun organization says shows contempt for gun owners and their rights under the Second Amendment.
Biden helped pass an assault-weapons ban in 1994, but the law had a 10-year expiration clause and contained a compromise that allowed certain types of assault-type firearms to continue to be sold.
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