The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Obama: ‘Our hearts are broken, too’

Amid grieving, president calls for action on guns.

- By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

ORLANDO, FLA. — A weary-sounding President Barack Obama came once again to comfort the grieving following another mass shooting, and called once again for change.

“Unfortunat­ely, our politics have conspired to make it as easy as possible for terrorists or just a disturbed individual to buy extraordin­arily powerful weapons, and they can do so legally,” he said Thursday afternoon, after meeting with loved ones affected by the Pulse nightclub shootings that left 49 dead and many more wounded. “This debate needs to change.”

He called out those who defend the need for Americans to be able to legally purchase high-powered assault weapons like the one used in the attack, saying they “should meet these families and explain why that makes sense. They should meet with the Newtown (Conn.) families, whose children would now be finishing fifth grade.”

He saluted possible new U.S. Senate gun control legislatio­n.

“I truly hope that senators will rise to the moment and do the right thing,” he said, “and then I hope the House does the right thing.”

The presidenti­al delegation was greeted at the Orlando airport by Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs and Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, who presented the president with an “Orlando United” T-shirt.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio greeted the president as well.

Scott, a Republican, has been in a tense standoff with Obama. The governor says he wants to rid his state of “radical Islam,” and toughen immigratio­n standards in the wake of Sunday’s terror attack that left 49 people dead.

“It’s evil,” Scott told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on during a Wednesday interview. “I’m responsibl­e for 20 million people in my state and 100 million tourists. I don’t want radical Islam in my state.”

Obama has described use of the term “radical Islam” as an unproducti­ve political talking point. He didn’t dwell on politics during his remarks on Thursday.

Rather, he said Sunday’s mass shooting at Pulse, a gay nightclub beloved by patrons as a safe haven, underscore­s the need for compassion.

“It’s a good time for us to reflect on how we treat each other,” he said. “We have to end violence and discrimina­tion against our brothers and sisters in the LGBT community.”

The president and Vice President Joe Biden placed 49 roses, one for each slain victim, at a memorial site honoring the fallen.

He talked about the somber moments he’d spent with family members.

“Through their pain and through their tears, they told us about the joy their loved ones brought to their lives,” Obama said. “So many young people ... so many students who were focused on the future. One young woman was just 18 years old.

“They’re part of the American family,” Obama continued. “And today, the vice president and I told them on behalf of the American people that our hearts are broken, too, and that we stand with you, and that we are here for you, and that we are rememberin­g those who you loved so deeply.”

He quoted one of the doctors he’d met with in heralding the heroics of first responders, police officers, health care profession­als and others who sprang to action after the shootings: “After the worst of humanity reared its evil head, the best of humanity came roaring back.”

But that’s not enough, Obama said.

“If we’re honest with ourselves, if in fact we want to show the best of our humanity, we’re all going to have to work together, at every level of government, across political lines, to do more to stop killers who terrorize us,” he said, vowing “relentless” efforts against terrorist groups like ISIS, to whom Orlando shooter Omar Mateen had pledged allegiance. “The last two terrorist attacks on our soil — Orlando and San Bernardino (Calif.) — were homegrown, carried out, it appears, not by external plotters, not by vast networks or sophistica­ted cells, but by deranged individual­s warped by the hateful propaganda that they had seen over the internet, then we’re going to have to do more to prevent these kinds of events from occurring.”

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ / AP ?? President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden visit a memorial to the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting Thursday in Orlando, Fla. Offering sympathy but no easy answers, Obama came to Orlando to console those mourning the deadliest shooting...
PABLO MARTINEZ / AP President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden visit a memorial to the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting Thursday in Orlando, Fla. Offering sympathy but no easy answers, Obama came to Orlando to console those mourning the deadliest shooting...
 ?? AP ?? President Barack Obama speaks to the media at the White House on Monday about the Orlando nightclub massacre after getting briefed by FBI Director James Comey (right), Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson (left) and Vice President Joe Biden.
AP President Barack Obama speaks to the media at the White House on Monday about the Orlando nightclub massacre after getting briefed by FBI Director James Comey (right), Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson (left) and Vice President Joe Biden.

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