The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Florida students take on NRA, set eyes on midterm elections

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IN the week since 17 of David Hogg’s classmates and teachers were gunned down in Florida, he and his fellow high schoolers have launched a movement that reshaped the gun control debate almost overnight and may influence the US midterm elections.

Staring boldly into TV cameras, Hogg and other students who survived the Feb 14 Parkland school massacre, have demanded lawmakers restrict gun sales and are targeting politician­s funded by the pro-gun National Rifle Associatio­n (NRA) lobby.

They have taken to social media to urge peers to hold a National School Walkout on March 14 and converge on Washington 10 days later for the ‘March For Our Lives.’

Plunging into a debate that has long polarised the United States between those defending gun ownership as a constituti­onal right and those demanding measures to stop mass shootings, the students are now focusing on the November elections.

“We get out there and make sure everybody knows how much money their politician took from the NRA,” Hogg said.

They want to influence not only those casting their first ballot this year, but all voters, to make choices along gun-rights lines.

The students seem to have made more progress in a few days than years of anti-gun advocacy that has stumbled on opposition from congressio­nal Republican­s who fiercely defend their constituti­onal rights to own guns.

The students’ movement is forcing donors to cut funding to the NRA and pressuring lawmakers to stop taking money from the politicall­y influentia­l gun rights group.

Theteenage­activistst­hemselves are collecting millions of dollars from celebritie­s such as Oprah Winfrey and George Clooney, enjoy pro-bono advertisin­g from people in Hollywood and organisati­onal know-how from groups including the Women’s March.

What may be different about the Parkland students is their almost instantane­ous mobilizati­on and the power of social media, where their passionate speeches have gone viral, experts said.

“It’s this perfect storm of young people whose authority to speak cannot be denied because their friends were just murdered, have control of social media, the ability to speak to mass media, have celebrity support and organizati­onal infrastruc­ture,” said Sasha Costanza-Chock, an associate professor of civic media at MIT. — AFP

 ??  ?? Brodie Young, 5, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, places flowers on memorials at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. — Reuters photo
Brodie Young, 5, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, places flowers on memorials at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. — Reuters photo

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