End Gun Violence Act of 2025
Prohibits or limits firearm access to reduce gun violence through potential measures like enhanced background checks, age eligibilities, and enforcement.
Prohibits or limits firearm access to reduce gun violence through potential measures like enhanced background checks, age eligibilities, and enforcement.
HR 2650, titled the End Gun Violence Act of 2025, was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on April 3, 2025. The bill has been referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary. Its stated objective, as reflected by the title, is to address gun violence, though the specific statutory provisions are not provided in the available information.
Note: All listed sponsors are members of the Democratic Party (based on publicly available sponsor information). No additional co-sponsor or committee assignment details are provided beyond the Judiciary referral.
The exact text and provisions are not included in the information provided. Based on the title and the typical content of “gun violence” bills, potential areas that such legislation often addresses (these are not confirmed for HR 2650) could include:
- Strengthening background checks for firearm purchases
- Closing loopholes in sale or transfer requirements
- Red-flag/initial-buyer notification or temporary removal of firearms in crisis situations
- Licensing, training, or safe-storage requirements
- Age or eligibility criteria for firearm possession
- Funding for enforcement, safety programs, and community intervention
- Penalties or enforcement mechanisms related to violations
Note: The above are illustrative categories commonly seen in gun-violence-related legislation and should not be interpreted as confirmed provisions for HR 2650.
If you’d like, I can fetch the bill text and provide a more detailed, provision-specific summary once the official language is available.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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