WASHINGTON - After the worst mass shooting in US history, Senate Majority 
Leader Harry Reid cautioned Tuesday against a "rush to judgment" on stricter gun 
control. A leading House supporter of restrictions on firearms conceded passage 
of legislation would be difficult. 
 
 
   Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. gestures during a 
 news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, April 16, 2007. 
 [AP]
   | 
"I think we ought to be thinking about the families and the victims and not 
speculate about future legislative battles that might lie ahead," said Reid, a 
view expressed by other Democratic leaders the day after the shootings that left 
33 dead on the campus of Virginia Tech.
Democrats traditionally have been in the forefront of efforts to pass gun 
control legislation, but there is a widespread perception among political 
strategists that the issue has been a loser in recent campaigns. It was notably 
absent from the agenda Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unveiled earlier this 
year when the party took control of the House and Senate for the first time in 
more than a decade.
In the wake of the Virginia Tech shootings, a few Democrats renewed the call 
for gun control legislation, and more are expected to join them.
"I believe this will reignite the dormant effort to pass commonsense gun 
regulations in this nation," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat 
who was a leader in the failed drive to renew a ban on certain types of assault 
weapons that expired in 2004.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., was one of very few lawmakers to defer 
pushing for gun control in the early hours after the shootings. "There will be 
time to debate the steps needed to avert such tragedies," he said on Monday, 
"but today, our thoughts and prayers go to their families."
By coincidence, Kennedy and Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., are scheduled to 
attend a demonstration Friday at a firing range used by US Capitol Police to 
draw attention to microstamping, a procedure by which serial numbers are placed 
on ammunition casings. The goal is to allow police and other investigators to 
quickly track ammunition to the gun that fired it.
The two lawmakers support legislation to require microstamping for all guns 
manufactured after 2009, and aides to both said they planned to go ahead with 
the demonstration.
Overall, though, said Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., "It is a tough sell" to 
pass gun control legislation. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., held a brief 
meeting on the subject to discuss possible legislation, but there was no 
apparent eagerness by Reid, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., or her to 
predict Democrats would lead a drive to toughen existing laws.
One senior Democrat, Rep. Charles Rangel of New York, said gun rights 
advocates are simply too influential to allow a tightening of gun control laws. 
"It's a regional thing, it's a cultural thing," Rangel said, arguing that even 
in areas where 85 percent of the people support more restrictions, the 15 
percent minority is far more active and outspoken.
Less than a month ago, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders abruptly pulled 
legislation to give the District of Columbia voting representation in the House. 
Republicans were using the issue to try to force a vote on repeal of the 
capital's handgun ban, and Democrats feared it would pass.
Hoyer told reporters he thought and hoped the shootings at Virginia Tech 
would make it harder for Republicans to prevail when the voting rights bill 
returns to the House floor later this week.
He refused to be drawn into a discussion of the longer-term political 
consequences of the shooting, saying, "All I am saying is there will be a 
debate. I am not going to enter into the debate today."
Not all lawmakers were as reticent.
Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, one of Congress' most persistent advocates of gun 
rights, noted that the student who police say was the shooter at Virginia Tech 
had brought a weapon onto campus in violation of restrictions. He said he 
doubted a law could be passed that would protect "any of us when somebody who is 
mentally deranged decides to do this."
President Bush said in an interview with ABC News said he expects a debate on 
gun policy, but now is not the time.
"I think when a guy walks in and shoots 32 people it's going to cause there 
to be a lot of policy debate," he said. "Now is not the time to do the debate 
until we're actually certain about what happened. And after we help people get 
over their grieving. But yeah I think there's going to be a lot of discussion."
One law enforcement official has said that the gunman's backpack contained a 
receipt for a March purchase of a Glock 9 mm pistol. The gunman held a green 
card, meaning he was a legal, permanent resident, federal officials said. That 
meant he was eligible to buy a handgun unless he had been convicted of a felony. 
Democrats have grown less supportive of gun control legislation as a party in 
the past decade. 
After the shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado, then-Vice President 
Al Gore cast a tie-breaking vote in the Senate on legislation to reduce the 
availability of certain firearms. He and other gun control advocates claimed 
victory, but many strategists believe the vote hurt him in the 2000 presidential 
election. 
Gun control tends to win favor among suburban voters, but it often stirs 
opposition in less heavily populated areas 
So far this year, there has been little evidence that Democrats feel 
otherwise after winning control of the House by picking up seats last fall in 
parts of Indiana, Ohio, Texas, Arizona and elsewhere where hunting is 
popular.