Weekend rallies to push for gun laws

Workers set up for the March for Our Lives rally on the National Mall on Friday in Washington. The march is returning to Washington after four years.
(AP/Alex Brandon)
Workers set up for the March for Our Lives rally on the National Mall on Friday in Washington. The march is returning to Washington after four years. (AP/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON -- Angered by the death toll from gun violence, tens of thousands of people are expected at rallies this weekend in the nation's capital and around the United States demanding that Congress pass meaningful changes to gun laws.

The second March for Our Lives rally will take place today in front of the Washington Monument, a successor to the 2018 march organized by student protesters after the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Fla.

Now with recent shootings from Uvalde, Texas, to Buffalo, N.Y., bringing gun control back into the national conversation, organizers of this weekend's events say the time is right to renew their push for a national overhaul.

"Right now we are angry," said Mariah Cooley, a March for Our Lives board member and a senior at Howard University. "This will be a demonstration to show that us as Americans, we're not stopping anytime soon until Congress does their jobs. And if not, we'll be voting them out."

About 50,000 participants are predicted to turn out in the District of Columbia, with rain in the forecast. That's far less than the original march, which filled downtown Washington with more than 200,000 people. This time, organizers are focusing on holding smaller marches at an estimated 300 locations.

"We want to make sure that this work is happening across the country," said Daud Mumin, co-chairman of the march's board of directors and a recent graduate of Westminster College in Salt Lake City. "This work is not just about D.C., it's not just about senators."

The protest comes at a time of renewed political activity on guns.

The House has passed bills that would raise the age limit to buy semi-automatic weapons and establish federal "red flag" laws. But such initiatives have traditionally stalled or been heavily watered down in the Senate.

Democratic and Republican senators hoped to reach agreement this week on a framework for addressing the issue and talked Friday, but they had not announced an accord by early evening.

Mumin referred to the Senate as "where substantive action goes to die," and said the new march is meant to spend a message to lawmakers that public opinion on gun control is shifting under their feet.

The March for Our Lives movement was born out of the massacre when 14 students and three staff members were gunned down by a former student on Feb. 14, 2018, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida. Surviving students organized bus trips to the state capital to lobby in person, and they succeeded in pressuring the Republican-dominated state government to pass substantial measures targeting gun violence.

Then-Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, signed legislation that banned bump stocks, raised the gun buying age to 21, imposed a three-day waiting period for purchases and authorized police to seek court orders seizing guns from people deemed threats to themselves and others.

The Parkland students then took aim at guns laws in other states and nationally, launching March for Our Lives and holding the big rally on March 24, 2018, in Washington.

The group did not match the Florida results at the national level, but has persisted in advocating for gun restrictions since then, as well as participating in voter registration drives.

Information for this article was contributed Ian Mader of The Associated Press.

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