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Teen activists' power play: Unite on gun control, then get out the vote

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Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Emma Gonz谩lez, a survivor of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., and a founder of the group Never Again MSD, hands out T-shirts to members of the Jr. Newtown Action Alliance at a March for Our Lives rally, on Aug. 12, 2018, in Newtown, Conn. Teen activists from several cities are joining forces to raise awareness about gun control policies.

From a distance it almost looked like a summer fair. Food trucks served nachos and ice cream, young families played corn hole, and a local band played music over a loudspeaker.

But a booth in the center of the field labeled 鈥淰oter Registration,鈥 with its volunteers in neon yellow shirts, hinted that the event was something else.

Student activists from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., wrapped up their summer-long March for Our Lives: Road to Change national tour in Newtown, Conn., on Sunday after visiting聽 across the United States.

Why We Wrote This

Student activism is growing, but it's not happening in a vacuum. Young people say that to make lasting changes, they have to speak with a united voice.

The tour began in early June in Chicago, where 174 people under the age of 17聽have been shot and killed聽, before ending in Newtown, where 20 first graders and six educators聽were shot and killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012. The two cities are intentional bookends for a tour aimed at registering and motivating young Americans to vote.

Despite having different connections to gun violence, young people from these three cities say they are doing what has never been done before: creating a unified front against the National Rifle Association聽(NRA).聽

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Audience members react to speakers at a March for Our Lives rally, on Aug.12, 2018, as the Road to Change summer bus tour arrives at its final stop in Newtown, Conn.

鈥淚 think that when there's 50 different people saying 50 different messages, it's so confusing to choose one that we think is most important,鈥 says Jackson Mittleman, a rising senior at Newtown High who lost a friend in the Sandy Hook shooting and is now co-chair of the Jr. Newtown Action Alliance. 鈥淏ut if we all start talking about background checks at same time, the country is going to pay attention to background checks.鈥

After 17 people died in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas school shooting on February 14, gun control supporters 鈥 including activists like Jackson with their own pre-established groups 鈥 rallied behind the Parkland students. They witnessed newfound attention from the American public and media because for the first time the victims were the spokespeople, rather than parents or community members, says Saul Cornell, a legal historian at Fordham University in New York who focuses on gun control and attended the rally on Sunday.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e pro-gun, you have the NRA, gun ranges, gun stores.... If you are a small, organized group you will beat a larger more diffuse group,鈥 says Dr. Cornell. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no question the needle has shifted because of these kids. You can see the changes.鈥

A spike in voter registration聽

Voter registration has increased among 18 to 29 year olds in at least 35 states since the Parkland shooting, the political data firm聽TargetSmart . Politically competitive states saw the greatest increases, with young voter registration growing by more than 16 percent in Pennsylvania, more than 11 percent in Virginia, and almost 8 percent in Florida. Jackson tells a cheering crowd in Newtown that voter registration in Connecticut has gone up 200 percent since the last election.

鈥淧arkland students have used this issue to have a greater conversation about the importance of politics among young people in a way that very few people have in recent time,鈥 says John Della Volpe, director of Harvard University鈥檚 Institute of Politics, whose work focuses on Americans between the ages of 18 and 29. 鈥淭hey have transcended politics, they have transcended culture.鈥

Still, there is an underlying bitterness in Chicago and Newtown 鈥 not at the Parkland teens specifically, but at a country that just now started listening. To some teenagers in Chicago,: gun violence has always been a part of their lives, but it took a shooting in a wealthy, white suburb to call attention to young gun deaths. The demographics in Newtown are relatively similar to Parkland, making the frustration more diffuse.

鈥淲hy was Sandy Hook not enough?鈥 says Momo Burns-Min, a rising junior in Weston, Conn., as her eyes scan the hundreds of people swarming the event鈥檚 humid tent. She was in fifth grade when the Sandy Hook shooting happened and she remembers having to color snowmen for four hours while her school was in lockdown.

鈥淚鈥檓 so honored to be in the generation of these Parkland kids,鈥 says Momo, 鈥渂ut at the same time, why鈥檇 it take this long?鈥

Still, they see themselves as teammates, and natural friendships have formed between the Newtown and Parkland teens. In an area behind the tent reserved for Newtown and Parkland families, students in dark blue 鈥淢arch for Our Lives鈥 shirts and orange 鈥淪andy Hook Promise鈥 shirts laugh, hug, and take selfies.

鈥淪omething that really surprised me was how much these kids are like us,鈥 says Isabella Wakeman, a board member for the Jr. Newtown Action Alliance. 鈥淸T]hey're not this big star on a pedestal鈥 That was really surprising for me to see that we can actually make a really personal bond, and not just a bond as an activist.鈥

At the event, two teenage boys tell Cameron Kasky, an outspoken student from Parkland, their own story. 鈥淲e go to a conservative Catholic school and they were not supportive of a walk-out, but we did it,鈥 says one of the boys, a look of pride on his face.

Parkland students David Hogg and Emma Gonz谩lez arrive shortly before the speakers begin.聽鈥淥ur eyes started watering when we saw her,鈥 says Jessie Braden, a rising junior from Weston, Conn., referring to Ms. Gonz谩lez. The audience claps and cheers when the teens enter.

Cameron, Emma, and David look tired. They have just come from a closed door meeting with the families of Sandy Hook victims and they are wrapping up a nationwide tour with almost daily events, where students come to them for encouragement 鈥 to share the weight of their own history with gun violence.聽

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Megan Scribner (c.) gets emotional during speeches by students at the March for Our Lives rally in Newtown, Conn., on Aug. 12, 2018. She participated in a walk out at her school in support of gun control after the February shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

鈥淏oth Parkland and Newtown are two ordinary, isolated towns that never have had to cross paths,鈥 says Jaclyn Corin, a rising senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas and March for Our Lives organizer. 鈥淲e were brought together, however, not only because we have experienced the same deplorable pain, but also because of the same monumental strength that arose from the victims and survivors in the aftermath of both tragedies.鈥

A promise for further involvement

When it is time for Jackson and co-chair Tommy Murray to speak to the crowd, Tommy asks the audience members to raise their right hand and promise to vote to end gun violence. It鈥檚 difficult to find someone in the audience not raising their hand.

And there is reason to believe they are telling the truth. Young Americans are more likely to vote when they believe their political involvement will actually have an impact, says Mr. Della Volpe, and since the 2016 election, more young Americans agree that 鈥 a reversal of an apathetic trend that began around 2013, after the economic recession and years of political gridlock.聽

鈥淲e see the relevancy of politics changing in the eyes of young people,鈥 says Della Volpe. 鈥淭here haven't been a lot of 鈥榳ins鈥 recently when it comes to [gun reform].... But the Parkland students have had successes so far. You can see the tangible successes.鈥

On March 9, less than one month after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas, Florida Gov. Rick Scott that raises the state鈥檚 minimum age to buy shotguns and rifles from 18 to 21 and bans bump stocks. The Parkland students and other young activists at the rally say they will聽continue their get-out-the-vote efforts this fall ahead of the 2018 midterm elections to support candidates who favor gun control.聽

An April poll by Harvard鈥檚 Institute of Politics (IOP) found that believe the country鈥檚 gun control laws should be more strict 鈥 a 15-point increase from a 2013 IOP poll after the school shooting in Newtown. The most interesting part of this increase, says Della Volpe, is that it has occurred across the political spectrum, among both young Democrats and young Republicans.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Hope Hottois, who turned 18 in March, registers to vote at the March for Our Lives rally, on Aug.12, 2018 in Newtown, Conn.

At the voter registration booth in the center of the rally, a young woman hands her clipboard to a volunteer, who offers to check over her registration form and congratulates her on this coming-of-age event.

鈥淚 was going to register anyway but it was pretty cool to do it here with the community,鈥 says Hope Hottois, who turned 18 in March. Coming to the rally today was so important to Ms. Hottois that she drove to Newtown alone from her home in Monroe, Conn.

鈥淲hen Sandy Hook happened here I was only 12. It was hard to process what was going on,鈥 says Hottois. 鈥淏ut now I鈥檓 18. I鈥檓 coming into my own and I鈥檓 finding my own voice.鈥

Correction:聽This story has been updated to correct the first name of Momo聽Burns-Min.聽

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