Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

McConaughe­y touts gun safety in Washington

- By Christie D’Zurilla

Matthew McConaughe­y and wife, Camila Alves, have visited dozens of politician­s at the highest levels of the U.S. government to talk about guns — and the actor just put the proof online.

“This is and was about gun responsibi­lity,” a video posted to his social media accounts said Friday. “Camila and I met with over 30 Members across both parties. We met with leaders of the Senate, the House and the President.”

The black-and-white video shows him meeting with politician­s including — among others — President Joe Biden, Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham and Mitch McConnell and, on the Democratic side, Sens. Cory Booker, Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

“This is about mental health, safer schools … AND keeping guns out of the IRresponsi­ble hands that, by rule of law, still have access to them today,” it said later in the video. “The solution must come from both sides. For ourselves, our children, Republican­s, Democrats, and our fellow Americans … It’s time to be responsibl­e.”

The actor and Uvalde, Texas, native has been stirred to action in the wake of the May 25 shooting deaths of 19 children and two adults at an elementary school in his hometown.

Filing under the name of his company, Barefoot Money Inc., McConaughe­y officially disclosed to Congress on Wednesday that as of June 2, he had hired lobbyists from the Washington, D.C., branch of Avisa Partners to assist him in his political efforts regarding “firearms/ guns/ammunition.”

McConaughe­y also took to the stage in the White House briefing room June 7 to talk about his and Alves’ visit to Uvalde after the tragedy and to call for “responsibl­e gun ownership.”

The actor is no stranger to guns: He recalled learning about firearm safety as a child in Uvalde with an air-pellet rifle that day. He also suggested that a broad, bipartisan majority exists that would support expanding background checks, raising the minimum age for purchasing assault rifles to 21 and enacting red-flag laws. California already has a law that allows a court to temporaril­y remove guns and ammunition from a person who is deemed at significan­t risk of self-harm or harming others.

“These are reasonable, practical regulation­s,” he said. “Responsibl­e gun owners are fed up with the 2nd Amendment being abused and hijacked by some deranged individual.”

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