Top White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said Republicans lawmakers’ concerns over what would be included in gun safety reform legislation after the mass shootings in Ohio and Texas are “all reconcilable.”

President Trump has been discussing background checks and “meaningful, measurable reforms” with Democrats and Republicans “that don’t confiscate law-abiding citizens’ firearms without due process,” she said on “Fox News Sunday.”

“But at the same time keep those firearms out of people who have a propensity toward violence,” she said.

Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said background checks and “red flag” laws intended to keep guns out of the hands of people deemed dangerous would be among the matters open to discussion when Congress returns in September.

But Sen. John Barrasso, the number three Republican in the chamber, last Friday signaled that some GOP members would be unlikely to support background checks.

Conway dismissed the Wyoming Republican’s comments.

“That’s all reconcilable,” she said, adding that Trump wants to “make sure people who shouldn’t have firearms don’t.”

Conway noted that the gunman in Dayton, Ohio, who killed nine people drew up a “rape list” of girls and a “kill list” of boys in high school, but that information wasn’t part of the record when he became an adult and allowed him to buy a rifle.

“Most people look at that, left right and center, and say ‘how does that happen?’” she said. “We can protect people’s civil liberties, privacy, constitutional rights and public safety all at the same time.”