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Michigan Advance: McMorrow’s gun violence prevention plan would take Michigan’s red flag laws nationwide
The Democratic U.S. Senate candidate would also continue to call for universal background checks, a renewed assault weapons ban and more robust community violence intervention funding Michigan’s so-called “red flag” law, which allows courts to temporarily remove firearms from a person who poses a clear threat to themselves or others, has become a model that Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Mallory McMorrow wants to see implemented across the country.
Expanding the state’s extreme risk protection order law at national scale is just one part of McMorrow’s plan to address gun violence should she win the ongoing Democratic U.S. Senate primary and, in turn, the general election against the presumptive Republican nominee, who at this point appears to be Republican former U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers.
