Republicans were objecting to a Democratic attempt to bring in new limits on gun purchases, a move which comes after a number of mass shootings in recent weeks, including one at a Texas school which saw 19 children and two teachers shot dead.
According
to report, a Republican legislator has brandished his guns during a debate over
gun control in the US House of Representatives.
Republican
Representative Greg Steube, who attended the committee meeting virtually from
his Florida home, said the legislation would ban various handguns.
The
second-term congressman held up each of his four guns for the committee to see,
describing one as "a gun I carry every single day to protect myself, my
family, my wife, my home".
Texas
Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee said: "I hope to God that is not loaded."
Mr Steube
replied: "I'm at my house. I can do whatever I want with my guns."
The Protecting Our Kids Act was added to the legislative docket after that shooting and the house judiciary committee held a nine-hour hearing on Thursday debating the measures.
They include raising the age limit for purchasing semi-automatic rifles from 18 to 21, making it a federal offence to import, manufacture, or possess large-capacity magazine, and the creation of a buy-back programme for such magazines.
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The committee's Democratic chairman Jerrold Nadler dismissed Republican criticism, saying: "You say that it is too soon to take action? That we are 'politicising' these tragedies to enact new policies?
"It has been 23 years since Columbine. Fifteen years since Virginia Tech. Ten years since Sandy Hook. Seven years since Charleston. Four years since Parkland and Santa Fe and Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.
"Too soon? My friends, what the hell are you waiting for?"
Jim
Jordan, an Ohio Republican, said: "We need to get serious about
understanding why this keeps happening.
"Democrats are always fixated on curtailing the rights of law-abiding citizens rather than trying to understand why this evil happens.
"Until we figure out the why, we will always mourn losses without facing the problem. Our job is to figure out the why."
The final vote in committee was 25-19 with Democrats accounting for all the votes in favour and Republicans casting all the votes against.
A House
vote could come as early as next week but, while it should pass there, its
chances in the Senate - which is split 50-50 and where 60 votes are needed -
are slim.
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