
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer urged Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to return the Senate from August recess to "immediately" vote on a House-passed background check bill and send it to President Trump's desk.
The big picture: Pelosi and Schumer are putting the pressure on McConnell to respond to the weekend's 2 mass shootings, pointing to the fact that the House passed 2 gun-control bills earlier this year. Pelosi led a noon call with the House Democratic Caucus on Monday to discuss how to move forward.
Both background check bills are currently sitting in the Senate:
- HR 8 would establish new background check requirements for firearm transfers between private parties.
- Rep. Jim Clyburn’s Charleston loophole bill, meanwhile, would extend the review period for the FBI to complete its background checks for gun purchases from 3 days to 10 days.
President Trump did not name any specifics in his address to the public on Monday about future legislation, but urged "real bipartisan solutions." Earlier on Monday, Trump tweeted in favor of "strong background checks" and suggested tying the legislation to "desperately needed immigration reform," prompting backlash from some Democrats.
Full Pelosi and Schumer statement:
Go deeper: Mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton force America to confront its gun problem