Addressing the issue is a top concern for Black Americans, who are nearly three times more likely than white Americans to die by a gun.
Gun violence is yet again at the forefront of the national consciousness following Wednesdayâs deadly high school shooting in Winder, Georgia. The tragedy that struck Apalachee High School, where four people were killed and nine others injured, has renewed calls for stricter gun laws from Democrats and gun safety advocates.Â
âWe have to end this epidemic of gun violence in our country once and for all,â Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, said hours after Wednesdayâs shooting at a campaign event in New Hampshire. She added, âIt doesnât have to be this way. It doesnât have to be this way.â Â
Advocates see Harris as the only and best candidate to build on progress in reducing gun violence, particularly in Black communities. Tackling the issue is a top concern for Black Americans, who are nearly three times more likely than white Americans to die by a gun.
According to a study conducted by the gun safety advocacy group GIFFORDS, 74% of Black voters want to see stronger gun laws. The survey, part of a $15 million campaign to highlight the issue of gun violence leading up to the Nov. 5 general election, also found that half of all Black voters are âextremely concernedâ about the prevalence of gun violence in their communities compared to 24% of the overall voting population.Â
âTheyâre more impacted by community violence, everyday violence, the type of violence that, in comparison to mass shootings, for example, doesnât get the proper coverage, the proper attention that is necessary to help tell the story of what is happening in these communities,â Aneesa McMillan, communications director at GIFFORDS, told theGrio.Â
GIFFORDS, which was founded by former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, a survivor of a 2011 assassination attempt, has endorsed Harris in the 2024 presidential race. Giffords praised Harrisâ âsteadfast leadershipâ on the issue of gun violence, adding that the Democratic nominee will âsave lives.â
McMillan says Harris has been a âkey partnerâ and âgun safety champion,â both as a U.S. senator and now as vice president. Harris currently leads the White Houseâs historic gun violence prevention office, which is tasked with implementing provisions from Bidenâs Safer Communities Act that allocates $250 million toward community violence intervention programs.Â
âItâs something that we know works in Black and brown communities,â said McMillan.Â
Angela Ferrell-Zabala, executive director of Moms Demand Action, told theGrio that as the potential âfirst-ever Black and Asian American woman president of the United States,â Harris will âbuild upon that transformative progress as the first-ever Black and Asian American woman president of the United States.â
âShe is not just a symbol of possibility â she is a powerful force in shaping policies to keep our families safe,â said Ferrell-Zabala, who noted that Harris strengthened gun safety laws as attorney general in California and, as a U.S. senator, co-sponsored legislation to expand background checks and prohibit abusers from having guns.
She continued, âShe genuinely understands the devastating reality of this uniquely American crisis that disproportionately impacts communities of color, and that we need to invest in the holistic, local solutions that have been created by those communities being impacted.â
In her remarks in New Hampshire, Harris noted that during her âFight For Our Freedomsâ college tour last fall, she asked students on each campus to raise their hand if âat any point between kindergarten and 12th grade you had to endure an active shooter drill.â
âIâm telling you, every time, the auditorium was packed, and almost every hand went up,â said the vice president.Â
Harris, along with President Biden, Democrats and advocates, have called for Congress to go further than the Safer Communities Act, which expanded background check requirements and established new criminal offenses. Gun safety proponents also want to see a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines and establish universal background checks.
According to the GIFFORDS survey, 50% of Black voters attributed the issue to a lack of mental health services and 49% blamed the nationâs gun violence epidemic on weak gun laws. Forty-seven percent of Black voters cited easy access to guns, and 40% blamed loopholes in gun laws.
Kristin Powell, principal of Black to the Future Action Fund, told theGrio that gun violence is also tied to economic policy.
âIf we have a robust economic agenda that is really bringing Black people out of poverty, then weâre going to see community gun violence go down,â said Powell.
According to the organizationâs Black Census, Black votersâ concerns about gun violence are three-pronged: community violence, white supremacist violence and police violence.
Though gun violence continues to plague the nation, there are signs that the work of the Biden-Harris administration is working. Data shows gun violence victimization is trending downward in 2024. However, advocates say they are concerned about the implications of former president and Republican nominee Donald Trump winning the election in November.
âWhat happens to the [White House] office of gun violence prevention if, god forbid, Donald Trump is reelected?â queried McMillan. âWe know that he will take pride in not addressing the issue or seeking to undo the progress that we have made because of his alliances to the NRA [and] the gun lobbyists.â Â
On Thursday, Trumpâs vice presidential running mate, U.S. Senator JD Vance, faced criticisms for saying that school shootings were a âfact of life.â He also misleadingly claimed that Harris wants to âtake law-abiding citizensâ guns away from them.â He and Trump also have called for tighter security for schools as a solution, though the National Education Association notes that hardening school security does not prevent school shootings.
âDonald Trump and JD Vance think school shootings are a âfact of lifeâ and âwe have to get over it,ââ said Harris campaign spokesperson Ammar Moussa, referencing a previous remark Trump made following an Iowa school shooting in January.
âVice President Harris and Governor Walz know we can take action to keep our children safe and keep guns out of the hands of criminals,â said Moussa. âDonald Trump and JD Vance will always choose the NRA and gun lobby over our children. That is the choice in this election.â
âTo elect someone who has relentlessly fought for women and gun violence survivors, whether it was during her days as a prosecutor or as vice president, means something,â Ferrell-Zabala told theGrio. âBecause in order to create a brighter, safer future for everyone in America, we need a president who understands and responds to those of us who have been systematically ignored.âÂ
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