I haven't blamed him as you have read and your post should perhaps be directed to those that think he is powerless.He’s not powerless, and he’s not all-powerful. He’s in the executive branch. He can suggest, and gather support for, legislation, and then once passed, can sign it into law. In order for change to happen, those on either side of the debate must compromise. The problem with the NRA and its elected lackeys is the slippery slope argument that any control is a violation of 2A. We all need those on the red side of the aisle to come off this stance or little can happen. What else do you expect blues in either the legislative or executive to do? You can’t just complain that he’ll do nothing without understanding why nothing has been done. Biden doesn’t have the luxury of threatening reds with entrenched bases with support for an opponent unless they support his agenda. Maybe the last President to have that at all was Reagan — and that was the early 80s after Iran, finding the bottom in the Cold War, two recessions and interest rates in the mid-teens — in other words, everyone was unhappy.
You can’t blame Biden’s leadership here. It has to come from reds voluntarily or voters who toss them out. And there actually appears to be some bipartisan movement on this issue — politicians can read polls and polls on mandatory background checks and lifting age restrictions lean pretty hard one direction. And reds in purple districts are worried about blues leveraging lack of support for gun-law change in November which is why they are starting to come to the table (and maybe among a few of them, their common sense and/or moral sense kicked in). I don’t know that this time is different, but it feels a little different as a Yank whose seen six decades of debate on gun topics.
I’m not usually a conspiracy theorist BTW but I wouldn’t be surprised if the SC is holding back releasing the decision in NYSRPA v Bruen, which is likely to destroy concealed carry laws given this court’s bent. That plus Rowe being eviscerated is going to make them a lightning rod at precisely the wrong time — another reason reds may be more willing to come to the table this time round.
It's as you say up to the executive and legislative to come to together for a greater cause and often there is an unfortunate trigger point or points to enact some meaningful change for the better beyond the incidents themselves and their frequency.
Leaders that enact change for the better do so because they bring the majority along with them but I am not sure yet their is an appetite for change I hope their is and I don't care who happens to be in administration when it does.
Australia and NZ are two countries who have legislated for some of the changes the vast majority of Americans desire and that is an end to mass murder in their own country.
It hasn't stopped gun violence but has restricted access to weapons used in mass murders.