Lawmakers Recommend Commerce Act to Reform Firearm License Approval and Monitoring Policies
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and U.S. Representatives Joaquin Castro (D-Texas), Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, and Norma Torres (D-Calif.) sent a letter to Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, calling on the Department of Commerce (Commerce) to incorporate a set of recommendations from the lawmakers to strengthen export controls and end-use checks for firearm exports to crack down on the unnecessary export of lethal weapons used in brutal killings abroad. The letter comes as Commerce prepares for the expiration of its 90-day pause on export approvals of certain firearms and related components.
“The number of firearms export license approvals skyrocketed when the Trump Administration transferred firearms export control authority from the State Department to Commerce…. While we continue to support returning all firearms export controls to the State Department, we urge the Department to incorporate the recommendations in this letter as part of its policy review in order to strengthen export controls and end-use checks,” wrote the lawmakers.
On October 27, 2023, Commerce announced a 90-day pause of export license approvals for certain assault weapons and other firearms transferred by the Trump administration from the State Department’s jurisdiction to Commerce. That pause is scheduled to expire on January 25, 2024.
“Commerce’s decision to initiate the pause and review process was welcome, but sorely needed… new data show that from March 9, 2020 (the date of the Trump administration’s transfer) to June 30, 2023, Commerce approved nearly 25,000 firearms export licenses with a total value of $34.7 billion, or roughly $10.5 billion per year. This represents a more than $1 billion increase in the annual value of license approvals as compared to the time period when the State Department controlled these approvals,” continued the lawmakers.
The lawmakers referenced recent reporting detailing the extent to which Commerce has worked with the National Sports Shooting Foundation and other industry trade groups to court foreign buyers for American-made firearms, despite the Biden administration’s efforts to stem the tide of gun violence at home.
The lawmakers detailed evidence of American-made firearms contributing to violence in countries such as Thailand, El Salvador, and Mexico. They also noted “evidence to suggest that soldiers and civilian militias in Israel are using American-made semi-automatic weapons to perpetrate shocking violence against Palestinian civilians.” The risks to civilians have likely increased after the Israeli government loosened gun ownership laws, authorizing “‘temporary licensing official(s)’ with only a single day of training to approve ‘anywhere from hundreds to thousands of firearm licenses’ over a few weeks.”
The lawmakers called for reversing the Trump administration’s decision and returning all firearms export controls to the State Department. However, given the seriousness and scale of the problem, the lawmakers are calling on Commerce to make significant changes in the interim to its export license approval and monitoring policies, as well as export promotion policies, including:
“The Commerce Department’s decision to pause new firearm export approvals and promotion is welcome news. We urge the Commerce Department to implement our recommendations in its review of its export policies, and if necessary, to extend the temporary pause as needed to reconsider its export policies as rigorously as possible,” concluded the lawmakers.
The lawmakers are also asking Commerce to answer a set of questions about its plans concerning export licenses by February 7, 2024.
Senator Warren has led efforts to hold the Department of Commerce accountable for its lackluster oversight of firearms exports, which contradicts the Biden administration’s gun safety agenda:
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