Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

145 business leaders implore Senate to act on gun violence

- By Rachel Siegel

The chief executives of 145 U.S. companies pressed Senate leaders to expand background checks to all firearms sales and implement stronger “red flag” laws, marking the latest push by corporate America to pressure Congress to take meaningful action on gun violence.

Signatorie­s to a letter sent Thursday include the heads of major retailers, tech firms, financial institutio­ns, including Levi Strauss, Twitter, Uber, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Yelp, Bain Capital and Reddit. The letter pointed to mass shootings in recent weeks — including those in El Paso, Dayton and Gilroy, California — but also called out a broader epidemic of gun violence that kills 100 Americans each day and wounds hundreds more.

“As leaders of some of America’s most respected companies and those with significan­t business interests in the United States, we are writing to you because we have a responsibi­lity and obligation to stand up for the safety of our employees, customers and all Americans in the communitie­s we serve across the country,” the executives wrote.

“Doing nothing about America’s gun violence crisis is simply unacceptab­le and it is time to stand with the American public on gun safety,” they continued.

On gun reform, companies from retailers to banks have considered whether to overhaul their own policies or distance themselves from the vast firearm industry — or not. Gun sellers have come under acute pressure to limit the sales of firearms, especially since 24 people were killed at two Walmart stores last month.

A recent Washington Post-ABC News poll found that Americans across party and demographi­c lines overwhelmi­ngly support expanded background checks for gun buyers and allowing law enforcemen­t to temporaril­y seize weapons from troubled individual­s. The poll found that 86 percent of Americans support implementi­ng “red flag” provisions allowing guns to be taken from people judged to be a danger to themselves or others.

Specifical­ly, Thursday’s letter urged the Senate to pass a bill requiring background checks on all gun sales plus a strong red flag law that would allow courts to issue lifesaving extreme risk protection orders. The House has passed gun-control bills, but they have stalled in the Senate.

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