'No more' or we vote you out: students
lead huge U.S. anti-gun rallies
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[March 26, 2018]
By Ian Simpson and Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Chanting "never
again," hundreds of thousands of young Americans and their supporters
answered a call to action from survivors of last month's Florida high
school massacre and rallied across the United States on Saturday to
demand tighter gun laws.
In some of the biggest U.S. youth demonstrations for decades, protesters
called on lawmakers and President Donald Trump to confront the issue.
Voter registration activists fanned out in the crowds, signing up
thousands of the nation's newest voters.
At the largest March For Our Lives protest, demonstrators jammed
Washington's Pennsylvania Avenue where they listened to speeches from
survivors of the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High
School in Parkland, Florida.
There were sobs as one teenage survivor, Emma Gonzalez, read the names
of the 17 victims and then stood in silence. Tears ran down her cheeks
as she stared out over the crowd for the rest of a speech that lasted
six minutes and 20 seconds, the time it took for the gunman to slaughter
them.
The massive March For Our Lives rallies aimed to break legislative
gridlock that has long stymied efforts to increase restrictions on
firearms sales in a nation where mass shootings like the one in Parkland
have become frighteningly common.
"Politicians: either represent the people or get out. Stand with us or
beware, the voters are coming," Cameron Kasky, a 17-year-old junior at
Marjory Stoneman Douglas, told the crowd.
Another survivor, David Hogg, said it was a new day.
"We're going to make sure the best people get in our elections to run
not as politicians, but as Americans. Because this - this - is not
cutting it," he said, pointing at the white-domed Capitol behind the
stage.
Youthful marchers filled streets in cities including Atlanta, Baltimore,
Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, San Diego
and St. Louis.
More than 800 demonstrations were scheduled in the United States and
overseas, according to coordinators, with events as far afield as
London, Mauritius, Stockholm and Sydney.
'TAKE THEIR LIBERTY AWAY'
Underlining sharp differences among the American public over the issue,
counter-demonstrators and supporters of gun rights were also in evidence
in many U.S. cities.
Organizers of the anti-gun rallies want Congress, many of whose members
are up for re-election in November, to ban the sale of assault weapons
like the one used in the Florida rampage and to tighten background
checks for gun buyers.
On the other side of the debate, gun rights advocates cite
constitutional guarantees of the right to bear arms.
"All they're doing is asking the government to take their liberty away
from them without due process," Brandon Howard, a 42-year-old Trump
supporter, said of the protesters in the capital. He had a sign saying:
"Keep your hands off my guns."
Wearing a red "Make America Great Again" sweatshirt, 16-year-old Connor
Humphrey of San Luis Obispo, California, said: "Guns don't kill people.
People kill people."
Humphrey, who was visiting Washington with his family for spring break,
said he owns guns for target shooting and hunting and uses them
responsibly. His school had a lockdown exercise last week.
"I think teachers should have guns," he said, echoing a proposal made by
Trump after the Parkland killings.
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Singer Miley Cyrus holds a "Never Again" sign as she performs the
song "The Climb" as students and gun control advocates hold the
"March for Our Lives" event demanding gun control after recent
school shootings at a rally in Washington, U.S., March 24, 2018.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Still, rallies for tighter firearm restrictions also sprang up in
rural, Republican-leaning communities ranging from Lewiston, Idaho
to Logan, Utah where there is strong support for the Second
Amendment constitutional right to own guns.
CELEBRITIES BACK STUDENTS
Among those marching next to New York's Central Park to call for
tighter gun controls was pop star Paul McCartney, who said he had a
personal stake in the debate.
"One of my best friends was shot not far from here," he told CNN,
referring to Beatles bandmate John Lennon, who was gunned down near
the park in 1980.
Taking aim at the National Rifle Association gun lobby, teenagers
chanted, "Hey, hey, NRA, how many kids have you killed today?"
The young U.S. organizers have won kudos and cash from dozens of
celebrities, with singers Demi Lovato and Ariana Grande, as well as
"Hamilton" creator Lin-Manuel Miranda, among those performing in
Washington. Actor George Clooney and his human rights attorney wife,
Amal, donated $500,000 and said they would be at the Washington
rally.
The U.S. football team the New England Patriots loaned its plane to
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students and their families to
travel to Washington.
At the march in Washington, an elementary school student from
Virginia, Naomi Wadler, 11, captivated demonstrators when she spoke
up for African American girls who were victims of gun violence but
whose stories "don't make the front page."
White House deputy press secretary Lindsay Walters said the
administration applauded "the many courageous young Americans" who
exercised their free-speech rights.
"Keeping our children safe is a top priority of the president's,"
said Walters, noting that on Friday the Justice Department proposed
rule changes that would effectively ban "bump stock" devices that
let semi-automatic weapons fire like a machine gun.
Also on Friday, Trump signed a $1.3-trillion spending bill including
modest improvements to background checks for gun sales and grants to
help schools prevent gun violence.
Former President Barack Obama said on Twitter that he and his wife
Michelle were inspired by all the young people who made the marches
happen.
"Keep at it. You're leading us forward. Nothing can stand in the way
of millions of voices calling for change," Obama said.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson, Lacey Johnson, Katanga Johnson and Lauren
Young in Washington, Alice Popovici in New York, Phoenix Tso in Los
Angeles, Zachary Fagenson in Parkland, Robert Chiarito in Chicago,
Jim Oliphant in West Palm Beach and Andrew Hay in Taos; Editing by
Daniel Wallis, James Dalgleish and Nick Zieminski)
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