Orlando Sentinel

Group spending $2M to elect Democrats

- By Anthony Man

The gun-control group Everytown for Gun Safety said Monday it’s putting $2 million into statewide Florida elections to help elect Democrats who favor restrictio­ns on guns.

The announceme­nt came the day after Everytown’s founder, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, finished a three-day series of political stops in South Florida.

Everytown describes itself as the nation’s largest gun violence prevention organizati­on. What it calls gun violence prevention involves gun control — measures that people on the other side of the issue consider infringeme­nts on Second Amendment rights.

The announceme­nt about the $2 million specifical­ly mentioned three statewide Democratic candidates: Andrew Gillum for governor, Sean Shaw for attorney general and Nikki Fried for agricultur­e commission­er and “others in Florida.” The money will go toward direct contributi­ons to candidates and independen­t spending in mail and digital advertisin­g.

Bloomberg, the billionair­e founder of a financial informatio­n company who may run for president in 2020, is giving a separate $250,000 to Gillum.

“These candidates are running on platforms that include strengthen­ing gunsafety laws in the Sunshine State, while their opponents are beholden to the gun lobby’s extreme ‘guns everywhere’ said.

The organizati­on also endorsed U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., for re-election. He’s running against Gov. Rick Scott who can’t seek re-election because of term limits.

Everytown calls the people it supports “gun sense candidates.” Its platform includes universal background checks on all sales, implementi­ng “red flag” laws like Florida’s across the country that allow court orders to remove guns from people who pose a threat to themselves or others, prohibitin­g bump stocks that allow semi-automatic weapons to operate more like automatic weapons, preventing domestic abusers who aren’t married to their victims from buying guns, prohibitin­g the sale of high capacity magazines and agenda,” the group prohibitin­g the sale of assault weapons.

“In Florida, this election is about gun safety — not political partisansh­ip,” John Feinblatt, president of Everytown, said in a statement. “The era of the NRA calling the shots is over.”

Everytown said the Democrats are better than their opponents on gun-related issues. Republican gubernator­ial candidate Ron DeSantis and Republican Attorney General candidate Ashley Moody have “A” ratings from the National Rifle Associatio­n. Republican Agricultur­e Commission­er candidate Matt Caldwell has an “A+” NRA rating.

Everytown isn’t going all Democratic. It has contribute­d $200,000 to the leadership political action committee run by state Sen. Bill Galvano, who worked for the school safety and gun regulation law the state passed after the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Massacre. Galvano is in line to become the next Florida Senate president if his party stays in control of the chamber.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY ?? Florida Democratic gubernator­ial nominee Andrew Gillum speaks at a political event at the Century Pines Jewish Center on Monday in Pembroke Pines.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY Florida Democratic gubernator­ial nominee Andrew Gillum speaks at a political event at the Century Pines Jewish Center on Monday in Pembroke Pines.

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