Los Angeles Times

Brady Campaign leader on the new face of gun control Student activists help give Kris Brown new hope for a safer future

- By Kurtis Lee kurtis.lee@latimes.com

Kris Brown has never seen the energy and support behind gun control reach this level.

Students are staging walkouts. Businesses are limiting gun sales. And politician­s are voicing support for legislatio­n that would have seemed unimaginab­le a month ago.

Brown, co-president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said that in the weeks since the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., the gun control advocacy organizati­on has swelled with support. Since the Feb. 14 shooting, she said, 18 new chapters have emerged nationwide, joining the more than 100 that already existed. The Brady Campaign is helping to organize “March for Our Lives” rallies across the country on March 24 that will call for more gun control laws.

Brown, 49, spoke with The Times about the student uprising, the National Rifle Assn. and gun control legislatio­n that could pass in the weeks ahead. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Why are you more optimistic now?

The debate that’s going on right now is different from what we’ve seen before, and the momentum is different. After Sandy Hook [the 2012 elementary school shooting in Newtown, Conn.], I think the nation was appalled. Congress attempted to pass legislatio­n that did not go anywhere. I think that many Americans felt that after the slaughter of innocent children in a school, the idea that Congress didn’t do anything at all about it made them feel very defeated about the prospect for meaningful change in this country.

The high school kids — many of whom were students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas — who are speaking out and continuing to share their thoughts and voices feel very much that this country has let them down. That’s what we’re hearing over and over again. And the demands for change that they’re making aren’t just for small fixes to the system. They want it all. And I think that’s really inspiring people to rethink why the rules are set up this way. Why is it that they’re set up and designed to protect gun manufactur­ers with no real internaliz­ation of the cost of human lives?

I think they’ve really sparked something, and we’re seeing that even in the political commentary. We have people like Lindsey Graham, even Ted Cruz on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” talking about measures related to more regulation­s of guns. That is unique and new.

So the students have made a difference?

I really do think they sparked something that is the momentum toward a real change. I think they’re the catalyst for the change. I think when you have people who have no interest except their own self-preservati­on and safety, who can speak with an authentic and both youthful and adult-like voice, that’s powerful.

Being victim survivors themselves, they have the ability to ask the really tough questions. Why have you, Marco Rubio, taken money from the NRA? Why aren’t you supporting these policies that we as voters want you to support? I think that has sparked a whole conversati­on in households all across the country. Yes, why is it this way? Let’s change this and fix it.

What does the NRA mean to you?

I see an organizati­on that started many years ago with a noble purpose, which is to represent owners of guns and provide informatio­n about proper stewardshi­p of guns. To provide opportunit­ies for sharpshoot­ing, going to ranges and things like that — that’s how the NRA started.

I now see an organizati­on that has strayed dramatical­ly away from actually representi­ng the gun owners that they were formed to represent and really taking the interests of manufactur­ers to heart.

The best example I have of that is the latest [Quinnipiac] poll around background checks that says 97% — 97%! — of all Americans believe that we must strengthen and protect our background check system. The NRA has fought tooth and nail actually against every proposal that would do that, and does even now. So I think it has gone way far astray from the purpose that it was set up for.

What do you say to gun control critics?

We have over 300 million guns in this country. It’s not about whether or not we need additional laws. We actually need reasonable laws and protection­s in place that actually work, and then we need to able to enforce them. So it’s both sides of the equation.

Trump mentioned taking guns away.

My candid thought is that if President Obama had said something like that, he might have been subject to impeachmen­t hearings right away. I think it’s an interestin­g standard. We at Brady actually have been strong proponents of extreme-risk laws, and we support due process being a part of that equation. Of course, if law enforcemen­t comes into anyone’s home and believes they’re truly an imminent risk to themselves or others, they can always have an expedited process in that case to remove guns.

Some say urban cases get less notice.

I hear that and I actually agree with that. There are over 96 people a day who die from gun violence in this country. Mass shootings constitute 1% to 2% of all gun violence. We want an opportunit­y here to actually talk as a gun violence organizati­on about all of the things that we think must be done to solve the problem of gun violence, and that is in every community.

For many communitie­s, the most dangerous part of the day is not at school. That’s the safest part of the day. The most dangerous part of the day is walking to and from school. So Brady has an entire campaign aimed at disrupting the supply of guns into urban communitie­s across the U.S., and we’re working with the Urban League to implement that campaign.

Finish the sentence: Guns in America ...

… have a very important role in American life, and it’s in all Americans’ interest to actually ensure that we live in a society where all of us can live our daily lives without the fear of being shot.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? KRIS BROWN, a leader of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, has seen a surge in support for gun control since last month’s Florida school shooting.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times KRIS BROWN, a leader of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, has seen a surge in support for gun control since last month’s Florida school shooting.

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