Gun control advocates are taking a page from Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) as they plot their strategy forward. Case in point: Shannon Watts founded the organization Moms Demand Action. The group is actively working to enact new gun control laws in the wake of the Newtown, Conn., school shooting last December. Watts says she modeled the group after MADD.
Karolyn Nunnallee, the former national president of MADD, says the organization has learned several lessons since its founding in 1980 to change the public’s perception on drunk driving. She says gun control advocates can learn from those lessons and use them as a foundation in their fight.
“We went with the research,” Nunnallee said Thurdsay on Jansing & Co. “What sound research could we use in stopping drunk driving? What can we do to educate the public? And it is about education and letting them know we will not tolerate drunk driving in our country.”
Nunnallee’s comments come just a day after the state legislature in Missouri sent the governor a bill that would expand gun rights and essentially declare all federal gun regulations in the state null. But even if the governor signs the legislation, there could still be legal hurdles. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has already said the federal government would challenge a similar law passed in Kansas.
MADD initially crossed the issue divide not long after the Newtown shooting when the organization’s founder, Candace Lightner, wrote an op-ed that reached out to the families of the victims in the shooting tragedy.








