top of page

Gun Violence Prevention

The Democratic Youth Coalition is dedicated to ending the tragic gun violence that continues to haunt our nation. Learn about and participate in our campaign against gun violence here.

Open Letter to Congress

Dear Members of Congress,

​

We are living in a generation where the significance of humanity seems evanescent; these instances of gun violence are acts of brutality, and a failure to act is a failure to all of humanity. What are we passing on to the next generation? We rest our trust in you, as legislators, to restore our hope in a safe society, where there isn’t a constant fear of gun violence. 

 

Our hearts are saddened, and our thoughts and wishes are with the victims and families affected by the dreadful series of shootings in El Paso, West Texas; and Dayton, Ohio. Unfortunately, these were not isolated instances, and people live in constant fear of gun violence as the death toll keeps rising.

 

The United States has the 32nd highest rates of deaths from gun violence. The National Center for Health Statistics reports 38,390 deaths by firearm, of which 24,432 were by suicide and 13,958 were homicides. According to data from the Gun Violence Archive, the United States has seen at least 156 mass shootings in 2021. It is only April. Our plea was not only established as a response to the events of the past couple days: our plea speaks to the urgent need for gun control legislation as a result of the 156 mass shootings in 2021, 610 mass shootings in 2020, 417 mass shootings in 2019, etc. The numbers keep rising but we are yet to see concrete action to stop these tragic events.

 

We ask you to support the following policies in your respective legislative bodies:

  • The White House American Jobs Plan, which proposes a $5 billion investment over eight years to support community violence intervention programs;

  • The Firearm Licensing and Registration Act, which establishes a process for the licensing and registration of firearms and prohibits the possession of certain ammunition and large capacity ammunition feeding devices; 

  • The Congressional Gun Violence Prevention Research Act, which authorizes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to conduct or support research on firearms safety or gun violence prevention;

  • The Senate Gun Violence Prevention Research Act, which authorizes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to conduct or support research on firearms safety or gun violence prevention; and

  • The Gun Violence Reduction Resources Act, which authorizes the Department of Justice to hire 200 additional agents and investigators for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.

As youth, we are disheartened that these calls for action have fallen on our shoulders, but we are hopeful: hopeful of a better future, hopeful for our communities, hopeful for our schools. In these circumstances, it is clear that the future of the nation depends on our ability to act now.

 

The Democratic Youth Coalition appeals to Congress to implement these long-needed measures to take action on gun control. Now, we humbly request all members of Congress to address the crises and make judicious choices. 

​

Sincerely,

The Democratic Youth Coalition

​

A Timeline of Legislation and Rulings on Gun Control

1791

The Second Amendment was ratified as part of the Bill of Rights, guaranteeing the right to bear arms to protect from tyranny.

1934

President Franklin Roosevelt's National Firearms Act placed a tax on the manufacturing and transfer of firearms to restrict firearms defined in the Act, including machine guns.

1938

The Federal Firearms Act required gun manufacturers, importers, and dealers to have a federal firearms license. It also made it so that convicted felons could not purchase guns and that gun sellers must keep customer records. This act was later repealed by the Gun Control Act of 1968.

1968

President Lyndon Johnson's Gun Control Act of 1968 replaced the FFA and updated the NFA. It gave definitions of different types of firearms, made it so felons and people with mental illnesses could not purchase firearms, required serial numbers on firearms, and implemented stricter licensing and regulation on firearms.

1993

The Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act of 1993 amended the GCA to have background checks before firearm purchases and established the National Instant Criminal Background Check System.

2003

The Tiahrt Amendment (of the Department of Justice appropriations bill) prohibits the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives from making information on where criminals bought firearms open to the public.

2010

The Supreme Court, in McDonald v. Chicago, ruled that the right to bear arms could also be used to protect against state governments, so some instances of state regulation of firearms could be unconstitutional.

1939

United States v. Miller upheld the NFA that prohibited guns unrelated to the promotion of a "well-regulated militia." This caused many lower courts to rule firearm regulations constitutional.

1986

The Firearm Owner Protection Act loosened regulations on selling and buying firearms.

1994

President Bill Clinton signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which outlawed the manufacturing, transferring, and possession of semiautomatic assault weapons. This act ended in 2004 and has not been renewed.

2008

In District of Columbia v. Heller, gun control laws under the Miller decision are found to violate the Second Amendment, as the amendment was reinterpreted to encompass the individual's right to bear arms for self-defense, rather than for a militia. This decision only applied to the federal government and territorial governments.

bottom of page