Obama in state Monday for gun control

President Barack Obama is coming to Connecticut on Monday to make his pitch for gun control. The visit will come just days after the Connecticut General Assembly is expected to approve a gun control package.

“President Obama’s visit is proof yet again that the Connecticut effect is not going away. His visit sends a strong message to the state and nation we must act now to reduce gun violence,” Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy said in a joint statement.

Obama is scheduled to speak at the University of Hartford. No time and details on whether the general public will be allowed in during his speech.

On the University of Hartford website: “On Monday, April 8, President Obama will travel to the University of Hartford, where he will continue asking the American people to join him in calling on Congress to pass measures to reduce gun violence. Details on the President’s visit to campus, including ticket access, will be released no sooner than Thursday, April 4. As soon as information becomes available, it will be posted.”

The university is located at 200 Bloomfield Ave, (Route 189) West Hartford.

Obama is expected to be joined by Newtown families.

“He will continue to ask the American people to join him in calling on Congress to pass common-sense legislation to reduce gun violence,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said at Tuesday’s press briefing.

Monday is just ahead of the planned start of the Senate’s debate on gun legislation, Obama will be in Connecticut where state lawmakers have announced a bipartisan agreement on gun legislation as a response to the shootings at Newtown’s Sandy Hook Elementary School, which took the lives of 20 first-graders and six adult staff.

“If it were simple to pass measures through Congress that are very common sense but would reduce gun violence in America, those measures would have passed already,” Carney said Tuesday. “And the president has always recognized that this is something that would be a challenge

Today, the president is taking is gun control tour to Colorado drawing attention to Colorado’s newly passed gun control laws as he applies public pressure on Congress to pass similar federal measures.

Here’s a report from The Associated Press:

The trip is heavy with political symbolism. Colorado expanded background checks and placed restrictions on magazines despite being a state with a deep-rooted hunting tradition, where gun ownership is a cherished right. Moreover, Obama will meet with law enforcement officials and community leaders at the Denver Police Academy, not far from the Aurora suburb where a gunman last summer killed 12 people in a movie theater. The president’s trip is occurring in the same week that prosecutors announced they would seek the death penalty for James Holmes, accused of carrying out the Aurora rampage.

With Congress due to return to Washington after a two-week Easter break, Obama has been scheduling high-profile events on gun legislation to push lawmakers and sustain a drive for some kind of action aimed at curbing gun violence more than three months after the massacre at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school.

Last week Obama called for legislation while flanked by 21 mothers who have lost children to gun violence. “I haven’t forgotten those kids,” he declared then.

In selecting Colorado, Obama is showcasing a state with a long centrist tradition that prizes its Western frontier heritage. But an influx of young coastal transplants and growing Hispanic voter clout have helped Democrats win a string of victories in the state. Even before the Sandy Hook massacre energized gun control proponents, Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper said he was open to new gun control measures in the state.

Colorado Republicans fought the new legislation, contending that Democrats overreached and will be punished by the voters in November. Several county sheriffs have vowed not to enforce the new gun restrictions. Democrats contend that the measures are generally popular, especially among the suburban women who decide Colorado elections.

Obama’s trip comes a day after a study commissioned by the National Rifle Association, which has opposed Obama’s gun control measures, recommended that schools have trained, armed staffers to increase security for students. The American Federation of Teachers denounced the proposal.

With just days left before the Senate begins its debate, there were signs that sweeping congressional efforts to address gun violence have flagged.

A proposed ban on assault weapons has little hope of passage and the prospects for barring large-capacity magazines also seem difficult. Key senators have been unable to reach a bipartisan compromise that would require federal background checks for gun transactions between private individuals. Federal background checks currently apply only to sales handled by licensed gun dealers.

Carney said administration officials were looking for middle ground.

“We are working with lawmakers of both parties, and trying to achieve a compromise that can make this happen. Especially when it comes to the background checks,” Carney told reporters. But he reiterated Obama’s insistence that other measures get a vote.

Jim Shay