Austin American-Statesman

Teens hit Florida Capitol, demand stricter gun laws

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A week after a shooter slaughtere­d 17 people in a Florida high school, thousands of protesters, including many angry teenagers, swarmed into the state Capitol on Wednesday, calling for changes to gun laws, a ban on assault-type weapons and improved care for the mentally ill.

The normally staid Florida Statehouse filled with students, among them more than 100 survivors of the Feb. 14 attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas H igh School in Parkland, on the edge of the Everglades. They held signs, chanted slogans and burst into lawmakers’ offices demanding to be heard.

The teens were welcomed into the gun-friendly halls of power, but the students’ top goal — a ban on assault-style rifles such as the weapon used in the massacre — was taken off the table a day earlier, although more limited measures are still possible.

Many protesters com- plained that lawmakers were not serious about reform, and they said they would oppose in future elections any legislator who accepts campaign contributi­ons from the National Rifle Associatio­n.

“We’ve spoke to only a few legislator­s and ... the most we’ve gotten out of them is, ‘We’ll keep you in our thoughts. You are so strong. You are so powerful,’” said Delaney Tarr, a senior at the high school. “We know what we want. We want gun reform. We want common-sense gun laws . ... We want change.”

Outside the building, the crowd burst into chants of “Vote them out!” as speakers called for the removal of Republican lawmakers who refuse to address gun control issues.

About 30 people left an anti-gun rally outside Florida’s Old Capitol and began a sit-in protest at the office of four House Republican leaders.

“We only asked for five minutes, and so we’re just sitting until they speak,” Tyrah Williams, a 15-year-old soph

omore at Leon High School, which is near the Capitol.

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