Mike Bishop ( Mich. ) NRA "While committed to defending the rights guaranteed under the Second Amendment, Representative Bishop will continue to review any and all legislation regarding this firearm accessory," his spokesperson told the Salt Lake Tribune. Read more »

Dave Brat ( Va. ) He told Business Insider he'd be open to a ban once he learned more about them. Read more »

Rodney Davis ( Ill. ) NRA "This is the first time I can sit back and relive the smells, the sounds, the fear, the terror, that all of us experienced, that I personally experienced," he told local media back in his district Friday. (Davis was on the Alexandria baseball field when a shooter open fired.) "And I now … understand the fear and the terror that every one of those concertgoers went through." Read more »

Mario Diaz-Balart ( Fla. ) “I believe it’s time Congress seriously consider the legality of bump stocks," he told the Tampa Bay Times. Read more »

Jeff Duncan ( S.C. ) Duncan said he was open to debating the issue. Read more »

Bob Goodlatte ( Va. ) Goodlatte said, “We’re going to look at the issue.” Read more »

Gianforte Greg ( Mont. ) NRA "I will defend Montanans’ second amendment rights. That being said, automatic weapons are currently regulated," he told Yellowstone Public Radio. "If these bump stocks turn semi-automatics into automatics, we ought to look at what appropriate rules ought to be in place." Read more »

Jody Hice ( Ga. ) "I look forward to understanding more about it myself," he told local Georgia radio on Friday, while emphasizing he thinks people need to look at the broader issue of why the shooter did what he did. Read more »

Randy Hultgren ( Ill. ) He said he's interested in the Trump administration regulating bump stocks. Read more »

Michael McCaul ( Tex. ) "We’re studying the issue. My understanding is it was exempted from the federal firearm statue in 2010, which would have been under Obama, and so there’s some discussion as to whether this could be handled administratively or whether Congress should be voting on it to put it back under the federal firearms,” the chair of the House's homeland security committee told reporters. “Because you are converting an legal weapon into an illegal weapon, fully automatic.” Read more »

Mark Meadows ( N.C. ) Meadows said, "It's obviously something we have to look at in the future." Read more »

Pete Olson ( Tex. ) “The FBI is investigating the type of weapons used by the shooter and whether they were illegally modified," he said in an Oct. 4 statement. "If that investigation reveals there were circumstances within the law that are not already addressed, I will evaluate that with my colleagues in order to address those shortcomings.” Read more »

Peter J. Roskam ( Ill. ) NRA He said he's interested in the Trump administration regulating bump stocks. Read more »

Paul D. Ryan ( Wis. ) Ryan said, "Clearly that’s something we need to look into." But he also recently said he thinks the administration's firearms agency could do a better job regulating bump stocks than if Congress tries to ban them. Read more »

Chris Stewart ( Utah ) NRA "It is my view these devices deserve scrutiny," he told the Salt Lake Tribune. Read more »

Scott W. Taylor ( Va. ) "I think that ATF should re-evaluate them," Taylor told ABC News, but said "it is a high, very high bar, to be able to take some folks' rights away." Read more »

Fred Upton ( Mich. ) “There is no place for [bump stocks] in a civil society. None,” Upton said in an Oct. 6 statement. Read more »

Greg Walden ( Ore. ) "I think it’s something we need to evaluate. If machine guns are illegal, does this create a machine gun? I’m disturbed by what I’ve learned," the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee told The Hill. Read more »

Mark Walker ( N.C. ) NRA "If somebody, just like any other avenue, is circumventing that law then I think it’s something we should take a look at it. My first impulse is that could be a problem," he told WRAL.com Read more »