Gun control: US Democrats stage sit-in in Congress

Lawmakers demand tighter regulations following shootings at Orlando gay nightclub

Democrats in the US House of Representatives staging a sit-in and demanding tighter gun coltrol regulations
Democrats in the US House of Representatives staging a sit-in and demanding tighter gun coltrol regulations

Democratic Party members staged a sit-in on the floor of the lower house of the US Congress to demand tighter gun controls after the shootings at a gay nightclub in Florida.

The Republican speaker of the House, Paul Ryan, dismissed the protest as a publicity stunt.

Senators are pushing for a compromise, with top Democratic senator Harry Reid supporting a Republican proposal.

Reid said he supported new legislation proposed by Republican senator Susan Collins that would stop gun sales to a limited number of people who are on some terrorism watch lists.

The bill is due to come before the Senate on Thursday. “Even though it may be a small step forward, at least it is a step forward,” Mr Reid said.

On 12 June, a man claiming allegiance to the so-called Islamic State group, Omar Mateen, killed 49 people at the Pulse club in Orlando, in the deadliest shooting in modern US history.

When the sit-in started, the Republican leadership switched off the House cameras but the protesters took their message online, tweeting pictures and streaming live video on social media.

Hours into the protest, Speaker Paul Ryan tried to resume normal proceedings, but he was shouted down.

The sit-in is being led by John Lewis, a veteran of the civil rights movement of the 1960s.

“What has this body done [to respond to the violence]?”' Lewis asked, referring to several failed efforts in the past week to pass a gun control bill.

“Nothing. We have turned a deaf ear to the blood of innocents. We are blind to a crisis. Where is our courage? How many more mothers... and fathers need to shed tears of grief?”

The lawmakers want a vote to be held before the scheduled break at the end of the week, ending on 5 July.

Ryan told CNN he would not bring a gun control vote in the House of Representatives.

“They know that we will not bring a bill that takes away a person’s constitutionally guaranteed rights without... due process,” he said.