The founder of Moms Demand Action talks about how she created one of the
most successful gun control groups in the country—and where they go from
here.
Shannon Watts has a bodyguard who travels with her. He doesn’t carry a
gun—his job is to scope out the local hospitals and know which one to
rush her to if she gets shot. That’s been life for the mother of five
since late 2012, when she founded Moms Demand Action, an organization
that advocates for stricter regulation of guns. Watts says the threats
of violence and rape started coming in within 24 hours of the group’s
formation. Threatening strangers have shown up at her house. The
National Rifle Association regularly features her in its magazine.
Right-wing provocateur Dana Loesch, before she went on the NRA payroll,
showed up with a camera crew to confront Watts off-guard at a protest
she was leading near the NRA’s annual meeting. It all started that day
in December 2012 when 20 first-graders were mowed down at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Connecticut, and a frustrated Watts wrote a
Facebook post about the need for new gun laws. She figured she’d just
join a group that existed—something like Mothers Against Drunk Driving,
except for gun violence—sign up for a few events, write a check.
Instead, sitting at her kitchen table and almost without realizing what
she was doing while talking with the fellow mothers who reached out to
her, Watts started what has quickly become one of the largest and most
far-reaching organizations in American politics and an aspirational
model for how a group of like-minded political amateurs can quickly move
from liking each others’ social media posts to having a real impact on
policy.
For more:
https://www.politico.com/podcasts/off-message
Politico's "Off Message" podcast is hosted by Edward-Isaac Dovere,
produced by Zack Stanton, and is a proud member of the Panoply network.
Intro/outro music by Podington Bear.