Thousands of Americans began to gather on Saturday, June 11, in the streets of the country to demonstrate in favor of better supervision of firearms after recent killings, including that in a school in Texas which shocked the States -United.

“I join them in reiterating my call to Congress: Do something,” US President Joe Biden wrote on Twitter in support of the planned protests in Washington and many other cities.

On May 24, an 18-year-old high school student carrying an assault rifle killed 19 students and two female teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, near the Mexican border. A few days earlier, an 18-year-old white supremacist had killed ten black people in Buffalo, in the northeastern United States.

These latest massacres, and the hundreds of shootings that do not make the headlines, have prompted renewed calls to come together to demand better regulation of access to firearms.

“It’s time to get back on the streets,” asks March for Our Lives, the movement founded by victims and survivors of the Parkland, Florida high school shootings, which had already organized a march in March 2018. huge demonstration in Washington.

“No matter who you are, walk with us”

On Saturday, the first hundreds of demonstrators arrived at the foot of the huge obelisk symbol of the American capital. One carries a sign with an assault rifle drawn on it, with the words “Child Killer” written in red underneath.

On the lawn were installed thousands of vases with white and orange flowers, representing the increase in violence in the country since 2020, the year in which 45,222 people were killed by firearm, according to the association at the origin of this memorial, Giffords.

In an op-ed for Fox News, March for Our Lives figurehead David Hogg wrote:

No matter who you are, walk with us. If we agree that killing children is wrong, then we either need to prevent these people from getting their hands on guns, or we need to do something about it. [People] are fed up, and it’s time to push Congress to do something.

“Pass common sense laws”

Joe Biden, taking up the elements of an impassioned speech delivered on June 2 following the massacre at the Uvalde school, called for his part on Saturday the elected officials to “pass common sense laws on the safety of firearms. fire “.

The Democratic president again listed the reforms he wants from Congress: banning assault rifles and high-capacity magazines; strengthen background checks, including psychological ones, of buyers; require individuals to keep their weapons locked up; encourage reporting in cases of fear of action and make arms manufacturers more accountable. On Twitter he wrote:

We cannot betray the American people again.

Joe Biden has repeatedly promised to act against this scourge that successive governments have been unable to stem. But in a country where nearly one in three adults owns at least one gun, conservatives strongly oppose any measures they believe violate the rights of “law-abiding citizens.”

The House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a text that would, among other things, ban the sale of semi-automatic rifles to those under 21 and that of high-capacity magazines. But he has almost no chance of getting through to the Senate, where the support of ten Conservatives is needed because of supermajority rules. At the same time, discussions are taking place between elected representatives of the two parties to try to find a compromise text likely to bring together the necessary majority.