“What are we doing? There are more mass shootings than there are days in a year,” a senator asked after the Texas shootings.

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The United States Congress has spent more than two decades without limiting possession of protected weapons in the Second Amendment to the Constitution.

Relatives of children around the school.
Relatives of children around the school.Reuters
  • America At least 18 children and a teacher have been killed in a shooting at a Texas school

The shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde (Texas) this Tuesday, where at least 18 children and a teacher were killed, has been condemned by the American political class, with Democrats trying to revive it. The eternal debate on gun control And Republicans avoid raising the subject.

“What are we doing? There are more mass shootings than there are days in the year. Our kids are afraid to step into the classroom every time if they are ahead. What are we doing?” lamented the Democratic senator Chris Murphy With a broken voice during the plenary session shortly after the news became known.

The Connecticut representative, whose emotive speech had widespread resonance on networks and on television, insisted that such a number of shootings in schools “Only Happens” in the United States And that these tragedies are “not inevitable.”

And it is that the United States Congress has spent more than two decades without limiting possession of protected weapons in the Second Amendment to the Constitution.

For his part, the Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris, Said that the leaders of the country should dare to act to stop shooting.

“Simply, as a nation we must have the courage to understand and act on the nexus of fair and sensible public policy,” Harris said while addressing the annual gala of the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies.

Clearly impressed, Harris explained that every time a tragedy like this happens, it’s heartbreaking, but, he insisted, it’s nothing compared to the trance that victims’ families go through. And yet it keeps happening. angered the vice president.

In that sense, former Democratic presidential candidate and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Called for more “legislators wanting to stop the crisis of gun violence in America”.

He declared on social media, “Thoughts and prayers are not enough. After years of doing nothing, we are becoming a nation full of pain.”

For his part, Democratic Congressman Dean Phillips He said on social media that he had a gun, but added that the country’s founding fathers “did not imagine this massacre when writing the Constitution.”

from republican rank The massacre was also condemned, but its main leaders refrained from mentioning the debate on gun control.

“Shocked and heartbroken by the hateful violence against students in Uvalde, Texas. The entire nation is praying for the children, families, teachers and staff,” the Republican leader in the Senate said in the network, Mitch McConnell.

Texas governor himself, conservative Greg Abbott, Those who reported the massacre described the tragedy as a “silly crime”.

Whereas, Ted Cruz, The Republican senator from Texas said he was praying for the minors and their families, and thanked the “heroic” work of officers who went to the shooting scene.

At least 18 children and a teacher were killed Tuesday after an 18-year-old boy entered an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, and opened fire on his victims.

The attacker, whose motive is still unknown, was Later the police shot him.

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