Shannon Watts was named one of TIME Magazine‘s 100 Most Influential People and Glamour‘s Women of the Year. Read below for these and other highlights.
“There are 400 million guns in a country of 330 million”, says Shannon Watts, the dynamic founder of Moms Demand Action, a grass-roots network in the USA that advocates for public safety measures to prevent gun violence. “Every day, 120 Americans are killed with guns and more than 200 are shot and wounded. Since 2020, guns are now the leading cause of death among children aged 1–19 years in America”, she explains.
Shannon Watts has taken up the mantle of gun-safety advocacy with the hope that in a generation, this uniquely American crisis will be an appalling relic of the past.
Shannon Watts, one of the country’s most influential gun-safety activists, says she will retire later this year from Moms Demand Action, the grass-roots advocacy group she began in her kitchen a decade ago and grew into a political juggernaut.
Whether she’s facing down Mt. Kilimanjaro or the National Rifle Association, Shannon Watts has never been one to shy away from a challenge.
In 2012, Shannon Watts was a former communications executive turned stay-at-home mom with 5 children.
From Lizzo to Shannon Watts to Quinta Brunson to Jamie Lee Curtis, here are the extraordinary women who made a mark this year.
There is an infamous tweet from 2015 that Shannon Watts will sometimes bring up in conversation.
This summer, Stephanie was invited to the White House to hear President Biden give his remarks on the passing of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act.
Nearly 10 years ago, I acted on an instinct that would change the trajectory of the nation: After the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, I bet that women could take on one of the wealthiest, most powerful special interest groups in American politics and rewrite our country’s history of gun violence—and started the grassroots movement Moms Demand Action.
Shannon Watts started Moms Demand Action as a Facebook group in December 2012.
These days, it’s impossible to celebrate – or even gather – in American communities without fear, including in places of worship, inside our cars, at grocery stores, the mall, or even in our schools.
On December 14, 2012, Shannon Watts was glued to the television. “I saw the breaking news that there was an active shooter in Newtown, Connecticut, and couldn’t believe 20 children and 6 educators could be slaughtered in the sanctity of an elementary school,” she tells Shondaland.
After the shooting in Uvalde, Texas, a bipartisan group of senators agreed on a narrow proposal for gun safety legislation, the first sign of congressional movement on the issue in decades.
You may know Shannon Watts from Moms Demand Action, a grassroots movement she founded nearly a decade ago that has since attracted over 8 million supporters committed to the fight against gun violence.
I am what you would call an accidental activist. Nearly 10 years ago, I was home folding laundry when I heard the news that 20 first graders and six educators had been killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Shannon Watts was a stay at home mother of five when she founded Moms Demand Action, the nation’s first and largest grassroots movement fighting against gun violence – and the most powerful counter-movement the gun lobby has ever faced.
Here we are again. A white man radicalized by racist rhetoric carrying an assault rifle just massacred Black people going about their daily lives, causing lifelong trauma and suffering.
On December 14, 2012, a shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, took the lives of 26 people, 20 of them children.
Jason and Ravi are joined by Shannon Watts, founder of the nation’s largest grassroots group against gun violence, Moms Demand Action.
Ghost guns—untraceable firearms that can be assembled from parts sold online without a background check—are the fastest-growing public safety crisis in the United States.
We’ve become experts on the nexus between misogyny and gun culture because we’ve lived it—in person and online—since the day we decided to stand up to the gun lobby.
Shannon talks about what led to her founding the nation’s largest grassroots group fighting gun violence, taking on the NRA, and the prospect of reforming gun laws in 2022.
Bennie Hargrove should be at school right now, scribbling in his notebook, eating lunch with his friends and sharing updates about life as a middle-schooler with his brother and sisters.
As we recover from yet another weekend filled with firearm violence across the country, any prospect of a “normal” summer, which so many American families craved after the COVID-19 pandemic, is quickly fading away.
Last Monday, a 21-year-old man killed 10 people with a Ruger AR-556 pistol inside a Boulder, CO grocery store.
It’s become an all-too-familiar routine in America: A mass shooting in a public place that shakes our collective consciousness is quickly followed by thoughts and prayers, media attention, and calls to action.
On Thursday, New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit against the National Rifle Association for breaking New York charities law — the result of an investigation into the NRA’s finances that began in April 2019.
Shannon Watts is an advocate and a proud mom of five children. Before the public became aware of her, she had a fifteen-year career as a communications executive for public relations agencies and Fortune 100 companies.
For Shannon Watts, a mother of five and the founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, the latest mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, TX, that left at least 19 children and two teachers dead underscores the epidemic the gun violence that led her to devote her life to gun control.
Shannon Watts, 48, is the founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, a gun violence prevention nonprofit she started after the Sandy Hook school shooting in 2012.
Shannon Watts was a consultant and stay-at-home mother of five in Zionsville, Ind., with maybe 75 Facebook friends when a gunman walked into the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in December 2012 and fatally shot 20 children.
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