Treating Gun Violence 'As the Epidemic That It Is,' Cory Booker Wins Praise for Sweeping Gun Control Plan
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National gun control groups and progressives offered praise on Monday for Sen. Cory Booker’s proposal “to end the gun violence epidemic,” with some advocates calling the plan the most ambitious of any gun control action plan offered by the 2020 Democratic presidential candidates.
The New Jersey Democrat detailed his plan in a Medium post, saying that meaningful gun control reform is a matter of making justice “a reality for all.”
“My plan to address gun violence is simple—we will make it harder for people who should not have a gun to get one,” Booker said in a statement. “I am sick and tired of hearing ‘thoughts and prayers’ for the communities that have been shattered by gun violence.”
“Talking about gun laws was once a political third rail. Heading into 2020, it’s a political must.” —Peter Ambler, Giffords Law Center
Booker’s plan includes a ban on military-style semi-automatic firearms like the AR-15—which have been used in a number of recent mass shootings—and high-capacity magazines, both of which have been called for by progressives who want sweeping reforms to dramatically curb what they view as a public health crisis, rather than incremental measures.
The proposal also includes a national gun licensing program, under which all gun purchasers would be requires to undergo a federal background check and fingerprinting, an interview, and a gun safety course.
“If you need a license to drive a car, you should need a license to own a gun,” Booker said Monday.
A 2013 survey showed that more than 77 percent of Americans support a gun licensing program, while the Center for Gun Policy and Research at Johns Hopkins University in 2014 found that gun licensing requirements have been more effective at the state level in reducing gun deaths than background checks and bans on certain weapons.
Several gun control groups noted that Booker’s sweeping plan is the latest sign that the country and the Democratic Party are quickly moving to the left on gun violence issues, in the years following several high-profile mass shootings which killed dozens of Americans.
“Talking about gun laws was once a political third rail,” said Peter Ambler, executive director of Giffords Law Center. “Heading into 2020, it’s a political must.”
The non-profit organization Brady—formerly known as the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence—suggested that Booker’s plan signifies a response to increased energy among gun control advocates including the survivors of last year’s shooting in Parkland, Florida, who led other young people to hold school walkouts and organized the nationwide March for Our Lives weeks after the attack.
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