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Bill seeks to wrap Congress in actual bubble

January 13, 2011
David Edwards, The Raw Story
1/11/2011

In the wake of a mass shooting in Arizona that left six dead and one congresswoman in the hospital, some Republican lawmakers seem to be most worried about finding ways to protect themselves.

Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN) wants to enclose the House Gallery in “a transparent and substantial material” such as Plexiglas, an aide told CBS News.

His legislation aims to keep the public from being able to throw explosives or other materials at members while they are on the House floor.

It’s not the first time Burton has proposed such a measure. An earlier bill reads, “The Architect of the Capitol shall enclose the visitors’ galleries of the House of Representatives with a transparent and substantial material, and shall install equipment so that the proceedings on the floor of the House of Representatives will be clearly audible in the galleries.”

The bill cites past attacks on Congress, including a 1915 bombing by an anti-war protester, the shooting of five members of Congress during a vote in 1954, and a 1971 bomb placed in the Senate bathroom by the Weather Underground. It’s not clear how the proposed legislation would have made a difference in the case of the Weather Underground bomb.

Another GOP congressman, Rep. Peter King of New York, is advancing a bill that would make it a crime to bring a firearm within 1,000 feet of a government official.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg released a statement Tuesday backing the measure.

“In the United States, it is illegal to bring a gun within 1,000 feet of a school,” the statement said. “Passing a similar law for government officials would give federal, state, and local law enforcement a better chance to intercept would-be shooters before they pull the trigger.”

Democrats are also planning their own legislation in reaction to the shootings.

And now… the rest of the story. …..

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