Parkland Father Fred Guttenberg Pleads With Joe Manchin to Push Gun Background Checks as Shootings Proliferate

(Author of Find the Helpers) Fred Guttenberg isn’t afraid to call out political individuals or corporations who are not stand for gun safety.

Fred Guttenberg, the father of a victim in 2018’s Parkland, Florida, school shooting, is calling on Senator Joe Manchin to join him in the push for universal background checks on guns as mass shootings continue to erupt across the country.

Addressing Manchin on Twitter, Guttenberg wrote, “I have called on you to [halt] gun violence with me. I have called on you to push the Senate to do anything required to pass the bare minimum of background checks. I have offered to meet you anywhere. In light of this latest shooting, please meet with me. ENOUGH!!!”

Guttenberg became a prominent gun safety activist after the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in which he lost his 14-year-old daughter, Jaime.

His plea comes hours after a mass shooting at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis left eight people dead. The attack came just weeks after back-to-back shootings at spas in Atlanta and a grocery store in Boulder, Colorado, have renewed the push for gun reform.NEWSWEEK NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP >

“I went to sleep last night & woke up to the reality of the latest mass shooting at a FEDEX warehouse in Indianapolis. I speak often of the need for the business community to join me in doing something about gun violence,” Guttenberg responded to the shooting. “Sending my love to the families.”

Joe Manchin
Senator Joe Manchin during an oversight hearing to examine the Federal Communications Commission spectrum auctions program for fiscal year 2021 on June 16, 2020.POOL

Manchin has become an obstacle to Democrats‘ efforts to pass legislation that would expand background checks to all gun sales.

The moderate Democrat from West Virginia has said he does not support two bills that recently passed in the House, suggesting he wants exceptions for private sales between gun owners who know each other.NEWSWEEK SUBSCRIPTION OFFERS >

“I come from a gun culture. I’m a law-abiding gun owner,” Manchin said last month, adding that he supports “basically saying that commercial transactions should be background checked. You don’t know a person.”

He added, “If I know a person, no.”

In 2013, Manchin proposed bipartisan legislation with Senator Pat Toomey to expand checks to all commercial sales, but only two of the Republican senators who supported the bill remain in the Senate.

“It is quite simple,” Guttenberg told Newsweek in an email on Friday“Passing gun safety will require every [D]emocrat in the Senate hold in support of HR8 and possibly be committed to going forward without the filibuster. He is the impediment to that but has also made other comments of concern.”

He said is hoping to speak with Manchin directly but has yet to receive a response.

On Friday, Guttenberg called on not only elected officials but also corporations to join him in the fight against gun violence.

“Anyone who follows me knows that I am a former business owner and have called on the business community to do more to understand and react to gun violence. The time for action is NOW!!! I hope my former boss Alex Gorsky, CEO of Johnson & Johnson and my former colleagues from Dunkin Brands are listening,” he tweeted.

Newsweek reached out to Manchin’s office for comment but did not hear back before publication.


Find The Helpers

What 9/11 and Parkland Taught Me About Recovery, Purpose, and Hope

Life changed forever on Valentine’s Day 2018. What was to be a family day celebrating love turned into a nightmare. Thirty-four people were shot at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Jaime Guttenberg, a fourteen-year-old with a huge heart, was the second to last victim. That she and so many of her fellow students were struck down in cold blood galvanized many to action, including Jaime’s father Fred who has become an activist dedicated to passing common sense gun safety legislation.

Fred was already struggling with deep personal loss. Four months earlier his brother Michael died of 9/11 induced pancreatic cancer. He had been exposed to so much dust and chemicals at Ground Zero, the damage caught up with him. Michael battled heroically for nearly five years and then died at age fifty.

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