NewsJune 24, 2016
WASHINGTON ---- Exhausted but exuberant, House Democrats vowed to fight on for gun control Thursday as they ended their high-drama House floor sit-in with songs, prayers and defiant predictions of success. Republicans offered a dose of political reality, denying House Democratic demands and holding a Senate vote designed to show a bipartisan gun compromise can't pass...
By ERICA WERNER ~ Associated Press
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., joined by other House Democrats, speaks Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington after Democrats ended their sit-in protest on the House floor.
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., joined by other House Democrats, speaks Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington after Democrats ended their sit-in protest on the House floor.Carolyn Kaster ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON ---- Exhausted but exuberant, House Democrats vowed to fight on for gun control Thursday as they ended their high-drama House floor sit-in with songs, prayers and defiant predictions of success. Republicans offered a dose of political reality, denying House Democratic demands and holding a Senate vote designed to show a bipartisan gun compromise can't pass.

"They're staging protests. They're trying to get on TV. They're sending out fundraising solicitations," House Speaker Paul Ryan complained in an angry denunciation of the Democrats' 25-hour occupation of the Capitol chamber. "If this is not a political stunt, then why are they trying to raise money off of this, off of a tragedy?"

Ryan said the House would not give in to Democrats' calls for votes on legislation expanding background checks for gun buyers and keeping people on the no-fly list from getting guns in the wake of the Orlando shooting.

And in the Senate, GOP leaders scheduled a vote on a bipartisan compromise by moderate Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, but only to show the "no-fly" legislation does not command the 60 votes needed to pass.

A visibly deflated Collins suggested Senate leaders were draining support from her bill intentionally by also allowing a GOP alternative to come to a vote.

"Let us not miss an opportunity to get something done," she pleaded on the Senate floor. But Republican leaders, unmoved, were ready to move on.

"I think we need to be engaged in something more constructive that would have actually stopped shooters like the Orlando shooter," said the No. 2 Senate Republican, John Cornyn of Texas.

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Yet while they may have lost the legislative battles at hand, Democrats on both sides of the Capitol were congratulating themselves on success in gaining attention for their demands for action to curb the widespread availability of firearms, first by a 15-hour Senate filibuster last week and then with their occupation of the House floor.

That latest effort broke up around midday Thursday after going through the night, even after Ryan moved up the Fourth of July recess and gaveled a chaotic House out of session in the early morning hours.

Democrats chanted, "Shame! Shame!" and "No bill, no break."

On Thursday, Democrats streamed onto the steps of the East Front of the Capitol, where cheering crowds welcomed them with cries of "We're with you!" under humid skies.

Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, the civil-rights icon who helped lead the sit-in, urged the crowd not to give up and to vote in the fall elections.

"We're going to win," Lewis declared. "The fight is not over. This is just one step."

For hours on the floor of the House, Lewis had led members in delivering speeches that mixed victory declarations with promises not to back down in their drive to curb firearm violence.

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