WASHINGTON POST EDITORIAL: Fifty victims. Twenty-six days. That - along with common-sense leadership from government officials - is what it took for New Zealand to pass a law that bans most semi-automatic weapons in the country. The contrast with the United States is both inescapable and striking. Despite the loss of far more lives in far more mass shootings - more than 2000 mass shootings since the slaughter of elementary school children in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012 - Congress has refused to make any significant change in federal gun law, including a needed reimposition of the ban on the assault rifles that are often the weapons of choice of mass murderers. "I can recall very vividly the moment I knew that we would need to be here, doing what we are doing right now," New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Wednesday as Parliament voted to outlaw military-style semiautomatic weapons and assault rifles. Attacks on two mosques in Christchurch by a white nationalist on March 15 had killed 50 people and, she said, "I could not fathom how weapons that could cause such destruction and large-scale death could have been obtained legally in this country." She put a temporary ban in place just days after the terrorist killings. Legislation to make the ban permanent and authorise a buy-back of the banned weapons moved swiftly through Parliament, passing with the support of all but one of the 120 lawmakers. New Zealand's form of government makes it easier for the ruling party to pass legislation. There also is no constitutional right to own guns, as exists in the United States with the Second Amendment. But the most significant difference between the two countries - even as the vast majority of Americans favor sensible gun laws - is the outsize and

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