Updated 2350 GMT (0650 HKT) June 18, 2015
Washington (CNN)President
Barack Obama and other top Democrats -- including Hillary Clinton --
find themselves in a familiar place following the mass shooting in
Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday: Pleading for gun control while knowing it's unlikely to happen.
"At
some point, we as a country will have to reckon with the fact that this
kind of mass violence does not happen in other advanced countries," he
said, taking a long pause before continuing. "It doesn't happen in other
places with this kind of frequency. It is in our power to do something
about it."
Obama made a similar pitch
in December 2012 after a gunman killed 20 young school chidren and six
adults in Newtown, Connecticut. Then, the President invested significant
political capital in an attempt to advance gun control legislation
through Congress. But his efforts -- combated by pro-gun groups like the
National Rifle Association -- were rebuffed in the U.S. Senate during a series of votes in April 2013. He called it "a pretty shameful day in Washington."
Since
then, though other shootings have occurred, the President has not
resurrected the same effort to achieve gun reform, an unlikely prospect
with the GOP-controlled Congress.
But
other Democrats sought to highlight the cause in the wake of Wednesday's
events, in which nine African-American parishioners of Emanuel African
Methodist Episcopal Church were killed, allegedly by 21-year-old Dylann
Roof, who is white. Authorities say they are investigating it as a hate
crime.
"How
many innocent people in our country, from little children, to church
members, to movie theater attendees, how many people do we need to see
cut down before we act?" said Hillary Clinton, the Democratic
frontrunner for the 2016 presidential nomination, at an unrelated event
in Las Vegas.
"In order to make sense
of it, we have to be honest. We have to face hard truths about race,
violence, guns and division," she said.
The NRA had no comment on Thursday on the Charleston shooting.
Rep.
Mark Sanford, R-South Carolina, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Thursday
Obama and Clinton were out of line to push for gun reform in the days
after the killings.
"Too often in the
wake of tragedies like this, advocates on both sides of the debate, use
the debate towards their own end," Sanford said. "Moving to a large
debate on gun control I don't think is what should come in the immediate
aftermath, within 24 hours, of this tragedy taking place."
Another Democrat seeking the White House declined to use the incident as a means for pushing for reforms.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who despite being a liberal hero on most issues has a more moderate record on gun control.
He voted against the landmark gun bill, the Brady Act, in 1993 and has voted to allow guns on Amtrak trains in the past.
In
1994, however, he voted in favor of the assault weapons ban. And after
the shootings in Newtown, Sanders voted for background checks and an
assault weapons ban.
On Thursday,
Sanders issued a statement calling the Charleston shooting a "hateful
killing" but did not tie it to a call for gun control. His campaign did
not respond to a request for comment from CNN on his position on gun
control on Thursday.
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