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‘Doing nothing … is not working.’ Red states pressured on gun violence.

After a string of high-profile shootings in recent weeks, Southern and Midwestern states, long champions of gun rights, have largely doubled down on these rights. But pressure is also growing to do something.

However modestly, support is building to reconsider gun safety legislation and increase support for mental wellness – a nod toward feelings among many Americans that government action is needed to help stem the waves of violence.

Why We Wrote This

Although Southern and Midwestern states have resisted changes to gun policies, they’re looking for ways forward that show they’re responding to the violence touching more and more Americans.

Expanding mental health services is one item, among others, that’s gaining renewed attention in these states. And following the shooting at Nashville’s Covenant School, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has called on lawmakers to pass what he termed an “order of protection law,” widely referred to as a red flag law, which allows authorities to temporarily seize weapons from people in crisis.

The path ahead is hardly straightforward, given how controversial it is to make any changes related to gun policy. But Carlos Arias, who was standing near Nashville’s Legislative Plaza during a protest, voices hope that differences can be bridged. When presented with a “gun control versus mental health funding” scenario, he says, “I think it’s a little bit of both. I think both parties – we can really meet in the middle.”

After a string of high-profile shootings in the past few weeks, Southern and Midwestern states, long champions of gun rights, have largely doubled down on these rights. And for the most part, they’ve rejected national efforts to enact red flag laws, which allow authorities to temporarily seize weapons from people in crisis.

But amid this digging in, pressure is growing to do something. However modestly, support is building to reconsider gun safety legislation and increase support for mental wellness in communities – a nod toward feelings among many Americans that government action is needed to help stem the waves of violence touching rising numbers of citizens.

Expanding mental health services is one item, among others, that’s gaining renewed attention in these states. For some lawmakers, such a step is a way to respond to gun violence while steering clear of gun regulation.

Why We Wrote This

Although Southern and Midwestern states have resisted changes to gun policies, they’re looking for ways forward that show they’re responding to the violence touching more and more Americans.

“The modern South continues to think that low taxes and small government and personal responsibility are the key, but personal responsibility works for people who are whole and healthy,” says Cal Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. “People who are not whole and healthy need to have the arms of their family, their church, their community wrapped around them until they are.”

Among the developments in GOP-led states:

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