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Congress rang in the new year with a political compromise to avoid what had come to be known as the fiscal cliff. While we avoided a tax increase on most Americans, we also pushed off once again many of the tough decisions required to get our country back on a responsible fiscal path.

If Congress and the White House are unable to agree on debt reduction measures by March, America will face a triple threat: a congressional vote to raise the debt ceiling, across-the-board spending cuts required by the sequester and the expiration of the law that keeps the government funded.

Inauguration 2013

Jan 17 2013

Whether or not you received tickets through our office’s lottery, you can still participate in the upcoming Inaugural Ceremony! Parts of the National Mall beginning at 4th Street NW will be open to non-ticketed observers. To download a map of the National Mall, including the public entry points, click here.
Senator Warner met today with the entire NoVA congressional delegation to work on strategy to relocate the FBI Headquarters to Northern Virginia.Despite individually representing different constituencies and potential FBI relocation sites, the bipartisan delegation vowed to work together to bring the FBI to Virginia.

Virginian-Pilot: Worthy of Applause

Building consensus on Chinese drywall

Jan 07 2013

From the final day of a hyper-partisan and frustratingly ineffective 112th Congress came one piece of legislation, pushed successfully by Virginia lawmakers, that's worthy of applause.

Virginia Beach Rep. Scott Rigell sponsored a bill that reduces the chance of building or living with contaminated drywall. He and Virginia Sen. Mark Warner began trying to rectify a health hazard discovered in 2009 when thousands of homes, including hundreds in Hampton Roads, were found to have toxic drywall imported from China.
Congress and the White House have a limited time to reach a compromise on taxes and spending to avoid going off a "fiscal cliff" at the end of the year. While some are not optimistic that a deal will be reached this month, Virginia Sen. Mark Warner believes we won't go over the cliff.

Steve Inskeep: And next we’ll hear a supporter of gun rights whose views are evolving. Virginia Democratic Senator Mark Warner owns guns, shoots on his farm, has an A rating from the National Rifle Association for his support of gun rights, and has not supported new gun laws in the past.

Senator Warner: And then last Friday, something that not as a Senator, but as a dad kicked me in the stomach more than anything. You felt “oh my god, how do we keep our kids safe.” That day happened to be the day when my college-aged daughters all came home from school and kinda said, “Dad you work up there, what are you gonna do about this?” And the answer of kinda, well, let’s enforce the existing gun control laws didn’t seem satisfactory to me.

SI: So what more needs to be done?

Senator Warner: Look, I can give you chapter and verse of every aspect of the budget negotiations. I am not an expert on all the particulars of the various proposals on gun legislation. It appears to me that as technology has moved forward and firearms have become more effective, mostly for our troops in the field in Iraq and Afghanistan, particularly with these high capacity magazines, that as these weapons that were built for the battlefield are slightly modified and then sold to the public, that we need to take a look at that. I don’t think changing gun laws alone is going to completely solve the problem. Clearly, we have to take a fresh look at issues around mental illness. But the idea that we can simply say, okay, status quo, just doesn’t feel right in my gut. You know, enough is enough.

SI: Senator, I mentioned on Twitter that I was going to talk to you and asked people as I often do if they have any questions and people were really specific, yes or no questions. They want to know, for example, should the 1990s ban on assault weapons be renewed?

Senator Warner: Question is, I’ve gone through an immediate tutorial on what defines an assault weapon. I’m not sure the definitions that were used in ’94 are the same definitions to be used in 2012 or 2013.

SI: Oh, because the weapons have evolved.

Senator Warner: Are there ways that we should look at these high capacity magazines so that, particularly people that are not militarily trained, can’t get off so many rounds so quickly, yeah that seems to me to be a place that responsible people can look for part of a solution. You know, I guess Steve, what I’m saying is, as I dig more into this, there isn’t a very appropriate time for anyone to drill down. I don’t have a bill to offer today. If I can find a way here where we can find some common ground on this, and I hope other legislators who have been strong supporters of the Second Amendment as well, are going to say, “hey, we gotta be able to answer our kids and our constituents a lot better that were actually part of the solution.” You know, the one thing I do know is the status quo is not acceptable.

SI: Senator, I wanted to ask about one other thing. Our sports commentator Frank Deford was on the air this week and he said that gun control advocates will take an opportunity like this to push their positions and gun rights advocates will push back on their positions and it’s a predictable dance and nothing will really change, he said. Unless sportsmen, hunters, decide that they are willing to push for what they might see as reasonable gun restrictions. Do you think that’s right?

Senator Warner: I think we need to hear their voices in this conversation and I think they will. And I again hope that those listeners who are hunters and gun owners will step up as well.

SI: Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, always a pleasure to speak with you, thanks very much.

Senator Warner: Thanks so much Steve.

Appearing today on WTVR CBS 6 News in Richmond, Senator Warner said that "enough is enough" and called for "rational gun control" following last week's school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.
Senator Warner spoke yesterday at an annual conference on implementing health care information technology (IT). The Senator stressed the importance of making sure new health IT products can interact effectively with each other, much like how cell phones created by different manufacturers and operating on different networks can still communicate.