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The leaders of the National Governors Association forming task force to address mass shootings

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Little Rock, Arkansas – According to the leaders of the National Governors Association, following the Texas school massacre, they’re forming a bipartisan working group to come up with recommendations to stop mass shootings.

Reaching consensus could be a tall order given that the nation’s governors have been divided along partisan lines on how to approach gun control and school safety issues.

The White House was informed by a letter that Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, the group’s chairman, and Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey, the vice-chair will convene a group of six to 10 governors, with a particular focus on making schools safe.

This week, the U.S. House approved a wide-ranging gun control bill that has little chance of passing the Senate. “It is our hope that the task force can provide suggestions to keep our schools and communities safe in a manner that is consistent with the demands of the American people, who overwhelmingly support gun safety measures,” the governors’ letter said. “We can all agree that there are commonsense ways to prevent these tragic events, and we must work together to do everything in our collective power to protect our communities and our most vulnerable citizens – our children.”

This comes as governors have been split along partisan lines on the best response to the Uvalde, Texas, shooting that killed 19 elementary school children and two teachers.

According to a recent survey, governors are divided, with Democrats calling for more restrictions on guns and Republicans focusing instead on beefing up school security.

Raising the minimum age to buy an AR-style rifle from 18 to 21 should be part of the discussion. But Hutchinson, who leaves office in January and is considering running for president, isn’t calling for such a move in his state and has said gun control measures won’t be on the agenda if he asks the Republican-controlled Legislature to take up school safety ideas during a potential special session.

The letter was sent the same day Hutchinson announced he was reinstating a school safety commission he formed to come up with recommendations following the 2018 school shooting in Parkland, Florida.

 

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