For six-year-old Noah Pozner, President Obama’s action plan to reduce gun violence came 33 days too late. On December 14, 2012, deranged gunman Adam Lanza stormed Noah’s school, shot his way into his classroom and fired 11 bullets into his small body at close range. Noah was the youngest of Lanza’s 26 victims, and the first to be laid to rest.
For the first time since that terrible day, President Obama offered hope to the millions of Americans left numb and dumbfounded by yet another mass shooting. His main legislative proposals include what many would consider common-sense solutions: universal background checks on all gun sales nationwide, banning “military-style” assault weapons and setting a maximum limit of 10 rounds for ammunition magazines. He also proposed tougher penalties for gun trafficking.
But not everyone considers such action a step in the right direction. Shortly after the president unveiled his proposals, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio issued the following statement: “President Obama is targeting the 2nd Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens instead of seriously addressing the real underlying causes of such violence.” According to Republican Congressman Tim Huelskamp of Kansas: “The right to bear arms is a right, despite President Obama’s disdain for the Second Amendment and the Constitution’s limits on his power.” Even more defiant was NRA president David Keene, who assured CNN’s Candy Crowley over the weekend that an assault weapons ban has virtually no chance of getting through Congress.
NRA president David Keene has a point. Gun control has never been popular with Congress. California Sen. Diane Feinstein’s assault weapons ban expired nearly a decade ago and her updated legislation attempting to renew it is languishing in the Senate. It doesn’t matter how many times President Obama or any politician reiterates their support of the Second Amendment: gun lobbyists will always try to convince voters that gun control means an automatic seizure of all guns.
But the tide is turning. Despite the fact that 45% of Americans live in a household with one or more firearms, support is growing for a shift in gun policy. According to the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, 85% of Americans are in favor of background checks for gun sales, 55% support a ban on assault-style weapons while 67% support a federal database to track gun sales. However, it also turns out that many Americans also agree with NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre; 64% support having armed guards in schools.









