President Obama brought his battle against gun violence to Minneapolis on Monday, praising the city for its efforts to reduce youth gunplay to an audience that included survivors of Minnesota gun tragedies.
"You've shown that progress is possible," Obama told an invited, sympathetic crowd at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in north Minneapolis, where he highlighted the city's success in reducing youth gun violence. In his first visit outside Washington, D.C., to promote his own anti-violence and gun-control agenda, Obama said the nation can make similar progress -- if the public demands it.
"The only way we can reduce gun violence in this country is if the American people decide it's important," Obama said. "We're not going to wait until the next Newtown, or the next Aurora," he added, referring to the massacre of schoolchildren in Connecticut and the gunman who shot up a theater full of moviegoers in Colorado.
The president faces an intense political fight over his plan, which includes universal background checks, and a ban on military-style assault weaponry and large-capacity ammunition clips. Obama met privately with more than 20 politicians, law enforcement officials and civilians who know the issue from terrible experience.
In an indication of how tough the fight might be, Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek, who met in a roundtable with the president and other law enforcement officials, said that while gun violence is a concern, "this thing about gun ownership isn't a privilege, it's a right guaranteed by the Constitution." Stanek urged the president to fix the background check system, but he stayed well short of endorsing Obama's complete package.
Meanwhile, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak expressed outrage at politicians who already were talking down the proposal's chances. "Well, guess what?" Rybak said. "People are dying out there. I am not satisfied with the main sort of front from the people in Washington, that this is sort of a game. Where are the other people on this issue? Get a spine, get a backbone. People are losing their lives."
John Souter, the sole survivor of Minneapolis' Accent Signage shootings last September, said of Obama: "If we don't have the moral courage to support the president of the United States, shame on us." Souter, an Accent employee, was in the private session with Obama.
Marsha Mayes, the mother of 3-year-old Terrell Mayes Jr., who was killed inside his Minneapolis home by a stray round in 2011, was among those attending the speech.