
House Passes Domestic Terrorism Bill After Buffalo Shooting
Newsy
The Congressional Budget Office estimates the bill would cost about $105 million over five years, with most of the money going toward hiring staff.
The House passed legislation late Wednesday night that would bolster federal resources to prevent domestic terrorism in response to the racist mass shooting in Buffalo, New York.
The 222-203, nearly party-line vote was an answer to the growing pressure Congress faces to address gun violence and White supremacist attacks — a crisis that escalated following two mass shootings over the weekend. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a member of the congressional committee investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol, was the lone Republican to vote in favor of the measure.
But the legislative effort by Democrats is not new. The House passed a similar measure in 2020 only to have it languish in the Senate. And since lawmakers lack the support in the Senate to move forward with any sort of gun-control legislation they see as necessary to stop mass shootings, Democrats are instead putting their efforts into a broader federal focus on domestic terrorism.