Albany Times Union

Groups speak in unified voice

How a coalition focused on preventing gun violence formed, pushed Biden to act

- By Emilie Munson

In the first two months of President Joe Biden’s administra­tion, many of the nation’s most powerful gun violence prevention groups were dismayed with the leadership of the man they thought was going to be their strongest champion.

While they were receiving private meetings, they felt American gun deaths were placed on the back-burner by an administra­tion single-mindedly pursing the COVID-19 pandemic. After multiple mass shootings and deaths in March, Alexis Confer, executive director of March for Our Lives, and Greg Jackson, national advocacy director at Community Justice Action Fund, flipped text messages back and forth saying “we’ve got to do something.”

So with leaders from Newtown Action

Alliance, Guns Down America and Brady: United Against Gun Violence, they formed a coalition called The Time Is Now. Soon 80 other groups around the country signed on.

They agreed to publicly lean hard on Biden, whom they still viewed as an ally, to act. Now. And they sent him a letter demanding he pass a suite of executive actions, appoint a leader for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and invest in community gun violence prevention programs.

Exactly, two weeks later, on Thursday, Biden announced six executive actions directly addressing those demands at an event in the White House Rose Garden. On Friday, the Biden administra­tion released their budget request, including over $200 million for the U.S. Department of Justice to work on gun violence and federal background checks.

“It didn’t happen magically,” said Po Murray, chairwoman of Newtown Action Alliance, a volunteer group formed after the 2012 school shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. “There’s been a lot of work with off-the-record conversati­ons with the White House as well as very public pressure from the Time Is Now Coalition.”

The episode demonstrat­es the growing influence of the numerous groups in the gun violence prevention movement as they increasing­ly knit together, raise more money and use tough tactics on a Democratic presidenti­al administra­tion and Democratic­led Congress.

On the flip side, gun rights groups are not seeing the same cooperatio­n and activism at the federal level, particular­ly as the country’s strongest gun-rights defending group, the National Rifle Associatio­n, is embroiled in a bankruptcy trial and a lawsuit from the state of New York to dissolve the group over alleged financial abuses.

“From our side, we have very fragmented groups here and there from the pro-second Amendment side,” said Diana Muller, a retired police officer and founder of the national progun group DC Project. “Obviously the NRA has some black eyes and may be less effective right now.”

In interviews, founding members of the Time Is Now Coalition said their new informal organizati­on is using new strategies and could be the backbone for a stronger fight to pass gun control legislatio­n in the U.S. Senate, where firearm bills have stalled for years. They celebrated their win with a coalition call on Thursday night and were back on the phone again for a steering meeting Friday morning.

“What this coalition represents is a real change in how gun advocates and gun safety organizati­ons work with administra­tions and leaders who are gun violence prevention supporters,” said Igor Volsky, co-founder and executive director of Guns Down America.

Volsky said gun violence prevention groups had “deep frustratio­n” with the Biden administra­tion because they campaigned on a strong gun control platform but in the early days of office, “shied away from the issue.”

“By the time we got to early February, we decided that we really needed to push the administra­tion on this to remind the administra­tion of these priorities,” Volsky said.

“We’re like ‘get on it Joe!’” Murray added.

Combining efforts

The White House did not respond to a request for comment for this article, but maintained in public statements through this period that it was committed to the issue and was evaluating what it could legally do with its executive authoritie­s on gun violence.

Jackson, an activist and survivor of gun violence, said the coalition is now focused on “elevating the urgency” to do more now.

“Over the years, there have been many organizati­ons formed out of tragedy and we’ve all been passionate about reversing that and addressing gun violence,” said Jackson. “But with this administra­tion and this Congress, I think this is the first time we’ve all collective­ly come together to advocate for a comprehens­ive strategy and that’s not just one bill, not just one change... for the first time, all of our organizati­ons are singing that same tune and we’re starting to see results because of that.”

Some major gun control groups are not in the coalition, like Everytown for Gun Safety, the organizati­on funded by billionair­e Michael Bloomberg, which spent $1.3 million on lobbying Congress on gun control last year — by far the largest sum paid by any group, federal lobbying disclosure­s show.

Sandy Hook Promise, another organizati­on formed after the Sandy Hook school shooting, also is not in the coalition. Sandy Hook Promise worked with the administra­tion of President Donald Trump to draft and pass the Stop School Violence Act, which provides $125 million to schools across the country for violence prevention programs.

Nicole Hockley, a co-founder and managing director of Sandy Hook Promise, who lost her son in the shooting, said their organizati­on could support a bill that did not require background checks for all private transactio­ns, such as those between family members. Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and some other lawmakers who support background checks on commercial transactio­ns oppose the checks for private transactio­ns, which are included in a Democrat-written bill recently passed by the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

She and her team are working on securing bipartisan support for legislatio­n in the Senate — where 60 votes are needed to pass a bill under current rules.

Other groups like March for Our Lives, Guns Down America and Newtown Action Alliance are advocating to end the filibuster, changing the Senate rules so that Democrats could pass gun legislatio­n without any Republican votes in the Senate using their simple majority.

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