Four bills -- two proposed by Republicans and two by Democrats -- went down to defeat in the US Senate late yesterday.
"What we saw last night on the floor of the United States Senate was a shameful display of cowardice," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told MSNBC television.
"They were common sense bills that were put forward that should have drawn strong bipartisan support that would prevent individuals who are currently suspected of having ties to terrorism from being able to buy a gun," he said.
Another Democrat-backed bill aimed to strengthen criminal and mental health background checks for those seeking to purchase firearms at gun shows and on the Internet.
A Republican measure proposed a 72-hour waiting period for those on FBI watchlists seeking to buy weapons, so that the government has time to seek a court order to block the sale if need be.
The second Republican proposal aimed to improve the background check system. Democrats rejected both GOP measures.
Guns are responsible for some 90 deaths each day in the United States, but serious legislative efforts to enact gun control are only raised after particularly horrific shootings.
Police stormed the club and killed the gunman, 29-year old Omar Mateen, a Muslim American of Afghan descent pledged allegiance to the leader of the Islamic State group during President Barack Obama has spoken out after each tragic shooting, exhorting Congress to enact stronger gun control laws to no avail.
Obama made a similar plea last week while meeting with the families of the Orlando shooting victims.
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