Democracy Dies in Darkness

Georgia school shooting elevates gun violence as issue in Harris-Trump race

The shooting came as the two presidential candidates have been campaigning most prominently on issues including the economy, abortion rights and immigration.

7 min
Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump. (From left: Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post; Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

With two months left in the presidential race, former president Donald Trump would prefer to campaign on issues such as inflation and immigration. Vice President Kamala Harris has been centering her campaign on expanding economic opportunity, while seeking to keep abortion rights as a top contrast with Trump.

But a school shooting in the battleground state of Georgia has thrust the issue of gun violence back into the spotlight, elevating — at least for now — a topic that had not been front and center in the matchup.

The immediate political reaction was familiar, signaling dim prospects for any near-term changes to gun laws. But gun-control advocates said the proximity to the election could focus candidates and voters more urgently on the issue.

“I think in some ways it is a familiar reaction, but also in some ways there’s a lot of differences,” said Monisha Henley, senior vice president of government affairs at Everytown for Gun Safety, which has endorsed Harris. “We are in a presidential election, so that is an immediate difference. Voters are making their decisions right now on who they think will best represent them up and down the ballot.”

Henley also pointed to the state level, saying she was encouraged by a bipartisan Georgia legislative committee that met Thursday morning to consider gun storage initiatives. The meeting was previously scheduled.

In the hours after Wednesday’s shooting, which killed four people and injured at least nine others, Democrats lamented the regularity of such tragedies and called for new gun restrictions. Republicans focused on portraying the shooting as an act of evil and sidestepped — or outright rejected — questions about policy.

Harris was campaigning in New Hampshire hours after the shooting and began her event by addressing it, at one point telling the crowd she was “going off-script” to speak further about it.

“Our kids are sitting in a classroom where they should be fulfilling their God-given potential, and some part of their big, beautiful brain is concerned about a shooter busting through the door of their classroom. It does not have to be this way,” she said.

“This is one of the many issues that is at stake in this election,” she added.

Her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, spoke about the Georgia shooting at multiple campaign stops in Pennsylvania on Thursday. The former high school teacher said he’s tired of hearing about thoughts and prayers.

“As a teacher and as a student and as a dad, I loved back-to-school season — time of hope, excitement. Now for those kids, it’ll always be a time of sheer terror, and that’ll be a memory that they’ll hold forever,” he said at an evening rally in Erie, Pa.

“It’s a reminder in the rest of the country — we’ve got work to do. And I, for one, am sick and tired of hearing about thoughts and prayers rather than actually doing something,” Walz said.

President Joe Biden, in a statement on the shooting, called on Republicans in Congress to “finally say ‘enough is enough’” and work with Democrats to pass a list of proposals, including an assault-weapons ban. Officials have said the gunman used an “AR-platform-style weapon.”

Biden sought to keep the shooting in the national conversation Thursday during a trip to Wisconsin.

“As a nation, we cannot continue to accept the carnage of gun violence,” he said at an event to announce billions of dollars for electricity in rural America. “I’m a gun owner. I believe strongly in the amendment, but we need more than thoughts and prayers.”

Trump’s initial comments on the shooting did not mention gun violence. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump referred to the shooting as a “tragic event” and said the victims were “taken from us far too soon by a sick and deranged monster” — a reference to the 14-year-old suspect.

Trump also did not mention gun violence when asked about the shooting during an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity that aired Wednesday night. Trump instead used a question about the shooting to reiterate his broader campaign message that he is the best candidate to restore peace at home and abroad.

“It’s a sick and angry world for a lot of reasons, and we’re going to make it better,” Trump said. “We’re going to heal our world.”

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