The Herald (South Africa)

Gun-control rally signs up voters

Activists race to register thousands of young Americans at US marches

- Katanga Johnson

VOTER registrati­on activists fanned out among young Americans who marched for tighter gun laws on Saturday, signing up thousands of first-time voters who vowed to eject lawmakers who oppose gun controls.

With mid-term Congressio­nal elections eight months away, the activists flocked to some 800 marches across the country to enrol young voters likely to back Democratic and independen­t candidates who tend to favour tougher firearms laws.

In Washington, volunteers for the HeadCount voter-registrati­on effort raised their fists and chanted “demonstrat­ion without registrati­on leads to frustratio­n”, before heading out with clipboards to sign up some of the nation’s newest voters.

“Parkland’s Emma Gonzalez called for more Americans to vote and that is why HeadCount is here today,” volunteer Aaron Ghitelman, 26, said of the pupil, who along with classmates forged a national, youth gun-control movement following the February 14 massacre at her high school in Parkland, Florida.

Hugh Williams, from Ypsilanti, Michigan, was among many 18-year-olds who answered her call.

“The more I see people marching and standing up for a cause I believe in, I want my voice to matter, too,” he said at the Washington march, adding that gun violence was a menace in his community.

A survivor of the Parkland massacre had a simple message for lawmakers.

“If there is no assault weapons ban passed, then we will vote them out,” Delaney Tarr, a senior pupil at the school, told marchers in Washington.

Organisers of the registrati­on drive hoped to sign up at least 25 000 people, a potential boost for Democrats who back stronger controls on assault-style weapons, bump stocks that let semiautoma­tic rifles fire like automatic weapons, and tighter access to guns for young people and the mentally ill.

By 8.30pm, they had signed up 4 000 nationwide, with the number climbing as groups across the country reported.

At a rally in Chicago, Kara Sharp, 17, of Island Lake, Illinois, carried a sign reading “Protect students not guns – 2020 voter” after travelling to the event with her father, a 53-year-old machinist.

Volunteers from a local chapter of lobbying group Indivisibl­e435, which backs progressiv­e political candidates, told her how to register to vote once she got home, as she did not have her driver’s licence with her.

“It’s time to disarm hate. I’ll be looking at NRA ratings of politician­s and also how they treat LGBQ issues,” Sharp, a Wauconda High School junior, said, referring to the grade the National Rifle Associatio­n gives members of the US Congress for their voting record on gun rights.

Participat­ion in US elections by young voters is often low.

Registrati­on activists are targeting the four million Americans turning 18 this year, as well as many 19- to 21-year-olds who have never voted.

In Parkland, Florida, Sari Kaufman was among pupils from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School – where the mass shooting took place – who urged peers to get involved in politics, register to vote and turf out lawmakers who did not protect them. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? ANTI-FIREARMS DRIVE: Americans – many school pupils and students – protest for tighter gun laws during the student-organised ‘March For Our Lives’ rally in Los Angeles, California
Picture: AFP ANTI-FIREARMS DRIVE: Americans – many school pupils and students – protest for tighter gun laws during the student-organised ‘March For Our Lives’ rally in Los Angeles, California

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