The effort to roll back the arguably unconstitutional Florida law banning 18-, 19- and 20-year-olds from purchasing long guns has been humming along quite well since Gov. Ron DeSantis announced his support for the legislation.
The restriction, which was passed in the aftermath of a 2018 mass murder in Parkland Florida, resulted in a series of legislative measures this year—Senate Bill 94, Senate Bill 920, Senate Bill 1716, and House Bill 759—all designed to restore the ability for young adults 18 to 20 to acquire rifles and shotguns, just like those in other states can.
Late last month, the state House of Representatives passed House Bill 759 by a 78-to-34 margin. Since then, however, nearly two weeks have passed, and the Senate version has yet to be considered in committee, causing alarm by some pro-2A observers.
“HUGE WIN for Gun Owners!” Luis Valdes of Gun Owners of America (GOA) posted on X. “The Florida House just PASSED HB 759! But the fight isn’t over. Now, it’s the Senate’s turn. SB 920 MUST get a vote! Call Sen. Jonathan Martin NOW: (850) 487-5033. Demand he brings SB 920 to the floor! No excuses! @GunOwners never quits!”
The problem appears to be that Senate leaders are somewhat divided on the issue of lowering the purchase age back to where it used to be. Senate President Ben Albritton isn’t fully on board with lowering the age restriction.
“I felt like we needed to pump the brakes and let’s keep talking to figure out what that win-win is,” Albritton after the House passed the measure.
According to GOA’s Valdes, Sen. Albritton has an important choice to make concerning the bill.
“Gun Owners of America is fired up to see the House pass HB 759, marking the third straight year in a row now that lawmakers have voted to repeal Florida’s unconstitutional under 21 gun purchasing ban,” Valdes told WFSU. “Senate President Ben Albritton has a choice. He can either champion the will of the people and restore their Second Amendment rights, or he can follow in (former Senate President) Passidomo’s footsteps and betray gun owners across Florida.”
For his part, Gov. DeSantis has been on board with the idea since the very first of the legislative session.
“I can tell you that we, in spite of us saying we’re the Free State, in spite of us being like, ‘Oh, we’re this Republican conservative bastion,’ we’ve definitely lagged on that issue,” Gov. DeSantis said in his state of the state address. “The free state of Florida has not exactly led the way on protecting Second Amendment rights. We need to be a strong Second Amendment state.”
Gov. DeSantis has also voiced his support for repealing the state’s red-flag law and allowing open carry. Earlier this year, he proposed what he called “Second Amendment Summer,” which would eliminate the sales tax on the purchase of guns, ammunition, and accessories from Memorial Day to the 4th of July.
If the Senate fails to pass the age change legislation, it will mark the third year in a row that the House passed the bill and the Senate didn’t have the courage to do so.
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