Gov. Tim Walz branded Minnesota Republicans on Wednesday as an "island of resistance" to increased gun safety in the state.
Speaking to reporters at the State Capitol, Walz said that GOP leaders in Florida, Ohio and other states have supported versions of expanded background checks and "red flag" laws. But there have been few cracks in the GOP's longstanding opposition to new gun restrictions in Minnesota.
"There has been one island of resistance, and that is the Minnesota Republican Senate, on having a conversation," Walz said.
Later in the day, speaking to more than 1,000 people at a rally on the Capitol steps, Walz sharply criticized Republicans who say tightening restrictions on firearms wouldn't prevent all gun violence, equating that argument with "the same logic" as someone who says traffic laws can't prevent all accidents. Walz also said it's wrong to be "demonizing those with mental health issues" as the real problem rather than laws that allow easy access to weapons.
The rally, sponsored by the groups Protect Minnesota and Moms Demand Action, featured emotional speeches by Walz, U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., and others, and was punctuated by shouts of "Do something!" and "Not one more!" from the crowd.
During his speech, Walz cited the "sadness and the anger and the primal rage" of once again seeing the flag flying at half-staff over the State Capitol in the wake of another mass shooting. During his 24 years in the Army National Guard, Walz said he fired all kinds of military weapons and believes many of those "damn things don't belong on the streets in our country."
Phillips urged his GOP colleagues in Congress to join the cause on a national scale, declaring that "change is coming" in America's approach to gun control that doesn't have to trample on Second Amendment rights.
Preventing bloodshed
Ramsey County Attorney John Choi cited a triple shooting a couple of hours earlier in Maplewood that wounded three people, one critically, as the latest example of gun violence locally. Universal comprehensive background checks could make a difference in helping prevent such bloodshed, he said.