Two big-name billionaires have hopped on the gun law reform bandwagon.
In an unusual move, Bill and Melinda Gates donated $1 million to the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility, a reform group attempting to reduce violence in the Evergreen State. The billionaires’ combined contribution was applied directly to Initiative 594, a policy sponsored by the organization that would require criminal background checks on all firearms sales and transfers in Washington — including at gun shows and on the Internet.
“We believe it will be an effective and balanced approach to improving gun safety in our state by closing existing loopholes for background checks,” the couple said in a joint statement obtained by msnbc.
The couple typically refrains from involvement with politics, but the Microsoft co-founder provided $500,000, an amount matched by his wife. The couple usually focuses its philanthropy on eliminating poverty and improving health and education in countries around the world.
Their contributions were revealed Monday through the Public Disclosure Commission.
Federal law requires licensed firearms dealers to perform background checks on prospective purchasers and to maintain records of the sales. But unlicensed private sellers — online and at gun shows, for example — are not required to observe the same policies. And about 40% of firearms sold in the country are transferred by such private sellers, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
Early last year, 345,000 Washington residents began pushing for the initiative, known as “I-594,” to appear on a ballot. They will have a chance to vote on the measure during the midterm elections in November.
The Seattle-based alliance, created in January 2013, has raised nearly $6 million, with the help of previous donations from venture capitalist Nick Hanauer, Gates’s fellow Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and his wife, Connie. A rival campaign, Initiative 591, would prevent Washington lawmakers from following legislation that places additional restrictions beyond the national standard for background checks.









