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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Eli Stokols

Matthew McConaughey, a Uvalde native, delivers an impassioned plea at the White House

WASHINGTON — The actor Matthew McConaughey delivered an impassioned speech in the White House briefing room Tuesday, calling for stricter gun laws in the wake of the deadly school shooting last month in his hometown in Texas.

After meeting with lawmakers on Capitol and President Joe Biden in the Oval Office, McConaughey stepped to the podium and conveyed a range of emotions: anger, sadness and hope that elected officials might finally act to tighten the nation’s gun laws.

“How can we make the loss of those lives matter?” he asked at the outset of his remarks, suggesting that change might be possible in the aftermath of the massacre in Uvalde, Texas, which left 19 children and two teachers dead.

“We are in a window of opportunity right now that we have not been in before,” he said. “A window where it seems like real change, real change can happen.”

McConaughey spoke about how he and his wife, Camilla, drove to Uvalde in the days after the shooting, describing his interactions with the loved ones of several victims.

Choking up, he held up a laminated drawing by Alithia Ramirez, whose parents told him she had wanted to be an artist. Flashing anger, McConaughey slammed the podium after showing the green Converse shoes of another victim, Maite Rodriguez, and explaining that the shoes were what allowed her family to identify her body.

“Every parent separately expressed in their own way that they want their children’s dreams to live on,” the actors said. “They want their children to continue to accomplish something after they are gone. They want to make their loss of life matter.”

Clarifying what that meant, he continued: “We want gun laws that won’t make it so easy for the bad guys to get the damn guns.”

McConaughey, who recalled learning about firearm safety as a child in Uvalde with an air-pellet rifle, called for “responsible gun ownership,” suggesting that there is a broad, bipartisan majority supportive of expanding background checks, raising the minimum age for purchasing assault rifles to 21 and enacting red flag laws.

“These are reasonable, practical regulations,” he said. “Responsible gun owners are fed up with the Second Amendment being abused and hijacked by some deranged individual.”

Without explicitly calling out Republicans, who for years have blocked Democratic efforts to enact gun restrictions, McConaughey said the issue should not be a partisan one and implored lawmakers in both parties to act.

“We can’t truly be leaders,” he said, “if we’re only living for reelection.”

After McConaughey left the briefing room without taking questions, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the White House is “encouraged” with how the talks are progressing, even though it’s unlikely any agreement would go as far as Biden — and now McConaughey — called for.

Biden met Tuesday with Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., one of the four-person bipartisan group working to hammer out a compromise on gun safety, Jean-Pierre said.

“We’re going to see how those negotiations go,” she said, stating that Biden “believes any step is a step forward.”

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