President Shares 'Hug and Cry' with Virginia Tech Families, Expects Gun Debate

President Bush spoke to the grieving Virginia Tech community.

ByABC News
April 17, 2007, 4:23 PM

April 17, 2007— -- In an interview with "World News" anchor Charles Gibson, President Bush said he and first lady Laura Bush came to Virginia Tech Tuesday to let the victims and families of the nation's worst campus shooting know that the nation stands with them.

"You give it your best shot on the words," Bush told ABC News, "and you hug and cry and that's what Laura and I have just done."

The president admitted to Gibson, "I don't know how adequate I am to help heal the heart," but added, "the only thing you can try to do, Charles, is show up and express your love and concern and give them a sense of assurance that there will be a better tomorrow."

When Gibson asked the president whether or not he expected the violence at Virginia Tech to renew the long-standing debate over gun control, the president quickly said, "I do. I mean, I think when a guy walks in and shoots 32 people, it's going to cause there to be a lot of policy debate."

Bush, who was endorsed by the National Rifle Association in both his presidential bids,acknowledged, "Now's not the time to do the debate until we're absolutely certain about what happened and after we help people get over their grieving. But, yeah, I do think there's going to be a lot of discussion."

Earlier in the day, the president delivered a brief, six-minute address at a convocation ceremony on the campus of Virginia Tech.

Bush, who had earlier ordered flags at half-staff over federal buildings, including the White House and Capitol in Washington, said he and Mrs. Bush arrived with "hearts full of sorrow," proclaiming, "This is a day of mourning for the Virginia Tech community, and it is a day of sadness for our entire nation."

First lady Laura Bush, standing next to her husband on the campus of Virginia Tech, said the families she and the president met with Tuesday were "shocked."

The Bushes, parents of twin daughters Jenna and Barbara who graduated from Yale and the University of Texas in Austin respectively, met with approximately 50 family members, including one victim and two families who had lost their only children, prior to doing a series of interviews.

Of the families who'd lost their only children, Mrs. Bush said, "The idea of that is so difficult for any parent to imagine," before adding, "They don't really understand yet what it means for them and for the rest of their lives."

ABC News' Gibson said the situation reminded him of the best-selling book "When Bad Things Happen to Good People" by Harold S. Kushner, to which the president replied, "That's life in many ways. I wish it were an easy, straight-line progression from birth to death, but that's not the way it works."