Politics

House Dems Are Torn Over Members Fundraising Off Gun Protest

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House Democrats are torn on members of their party, including leadership, fundraising off of their  gun-control protest on the House floor – a move Republicans slammed for politicizing an act of terror for political gain.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and top members of the party –  including Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, who led the sit-in, and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California – sent out emails throughout the demonstration, which started around 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and lasted 24 hours, asking for donations by criticizing the GOP for opting against holding a vote on a measure, dubbed “no fly, no buy.” The legislation would stop anyone on the no-fly list from purchasing a firearm.

“I don’t think it was a good idea – I don’t agree with it,” Rep. Richard Neal of Massachusetts told The Daily Caller News Foundation. “There is a tragedy at hand here and we should, as we proceed, focus on the tragedy.

Rep. Jim Clyburn disagreed, telling TheDCNF Republicans’ complaints over the fundraising push was “as far-fetched as their refusal to block access to automatic weapons for the average person.”

“Sending out notification asking people to support the activity that is taking place on the floor – I see nothing wrong with that,” he said.

Pennsylvania Democrat Rep. Matt Cartwright, who didn’t personally send an email, said the issue isn’t completely black and white.

“It’s complicated, if you want to get things done in Washington, you need to raise money; so for me, it’s not all one or the other,” he told TheDCNF. Kentucky Rep. John Yarmouth added he doesn’t think the GOP has room to criticize.

“I don’t think any Republican would like to have their fundraising solicitation scrutinized for when they have taken advantage of a tragedy or some other sense of an issue,” he said.

GOP lawmakers called the protest a publicity stunt, saying if Democrats wanted a vote, they should have followed procedure by getting the signatures for a discharge petition.

House Republican Study Committee Chairman Bill Flores of Texas blasted Democrats for their failure to adhere to Federal Election Committee rules.

“It’s inappropriate activity, it’s disappointing and I hope they are held accountable of the law,” he said. “They shouldn’t be fundraising off of anything relating to official activities.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy agreed, saying the move is a major cause for concern.

“For me, I was shocked by seeing that. It was distasteful, it shows the core of what this was about,” he told TheDCNF. “In committee, even two Democrats voted against it. Was this more about raising money? And that raises the real question on why someone would do that during that time; it raises ethical questions on what the point was of what they were doing.”

The push to bring the bill to the floor comes in the wake of a terrorist attack at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., killing 49 and injuring dozens more.

An identical bill failed in the Senate on Monday and the House counterpart failed to pass out of committee in the lower chamber earlier in the week. Later on Thursday, a bi-partisan gun-control bill backed by Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins won majority-support, but did not pass the 60-vote threshold required.

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