DENVER (AP) — The
head of the National Rifle Association said Thursday he's confident that
Congress won't approve an assault weapons ban or a limit on
high-capacity ammunition magazines after mass shootings in Colorado and
Connecticut.
David Keene predicted failure for all congressional
measures related to guns, including expanded background checks for gun
purchases.
"I tell you what these things are, these are all
feel-good proposals, because at the end of the day, what do they do to
prevent" a mass shooter? asked Keene, the NRA's president.
Keene
was in Denver to meet with Colorado's Democratic governor and state
lawmakers. He met with The Associated Press for an interview before
sitting down with state officials. He talked about prospects for federal
gun control measures under discussion in Congress and predicted
political peril for Democrats who support such bills.
"The
Senate's where the action's going to be," Keene said. "The House is sort
of sitting back, and you can almost hear the House Republican
leadership saying under their breath, you know, go ahead. We've got a
few members that wouldn't mind sitting in the Senate. If you do this,
maybe they will. So the Senate leadership is much more cautious."
In
recent weeks, Keene has become an increasingly public figure for the
powerful gun rights group in the ongoing debate on gun control. He has
offered a softer, if equally staunch voice for the gun lobby's ideas as
compared with Wayne LaPierre, the fiery executive vice president who
remains the NRA's most prominent voice on the public stage.
Keene has been active with the NRA for decades, starting as a board member before being elected the group's president in 2011.
Keene
on Thursday called universal background checks a political "sweet spot"
but said the plan won't work in practice. He says current background
check systems are underfunded and that requiring background checks on
private sales would be a logistical mess.
He indicated he wants to
tour the nation meeting with more state officials about looming gun
control proposals. However, he dismissed plans to meet with New York
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat who enacted the first gun control measure
in the nation following the Sandy Hook school massacre.
"There really isn't any reasonable discussion you can have with him," Keene said of Cuomo.
Colorado's
governor has called for universal background checks, even on
neighbor-to-neighbor sales. Hickenlooper's gun posture has shifted
somewhat from last July, in the days right after the Aurora movie
theater shooting that killed 12. Hickenlooper said then that stricter
laws would not have prevented the mass shooting.
"I think Gov.
Hickenlooper had it right after the Aurora shooting. He said it's not
the laws, it's these kinds of people," Keene said.
Hickenlooper
has since proposed enhanced mental health services. But he told the
Democratic Legislature in a January address, "it's not enough to prevent
dangerous people from getting weapons."
Lawmakers are expected to
consider expanded background checks, as well as a 10-round magazine
limit. Keene said the NRA opposes ammunition limits.
"Our view is
that there are some people, the people you try to identify, who
shouldn't have any firearms with any size magazine," he said.
Colorado
Senate President John Morse has also suggested making weapons
manufacturers liable for damage caused by the products they make, an
idea that appears to conflict with federal law banning such liability.
Colorado's
Legislature has already rejected several GOP proposals to reduce gun
violence, including a bill to allow school employees to carry concealed
weapons.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.