TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) – Rep. Randy Advantageous, who was not too long ago elected to Congress, is revisiting a dialogue about weapons on school campuses, following Thursday’s lethal mass capturing at Florida State College.
Advantageous served as a state senator in Tallahassee earlier than voters despatched him to Washington, D.C. He filed Senate Bill 814 to permit college students to hold hid firearms on campus.
Throughout a Senate listening to concerning that invoice, the then-senator made a plea for lawmakers to approve the measure so it may transfer to the Senate flooring. He instructed them he filed the invoice after he felt Jewish school college students have been being mistreated throughout pro-Israel protests.
“I decided at that time that if colleges wouldn’t defend these kids, then I’d guarantee that they might defend themselves,” Advantageous stated.
The lawmaker had extra so as to add in his try to achieve assist for his invoice.
“There isn’t any magic drive discipline that retains weapons from coming onto our school campuses. There’s not one,” Advantageous stated. “There are weapons on school campuses proper now; numerous them. They’re simply being carried by the individuals who do not observe the principles.”
Senate democrats on the Prison Justice Committee pushed again. Senate Minority Chief Jason Pizzo spoke out in opposition to the measure.
“If there was a invoice that spoke to far more funding for safety, armed safety for the safety of scholars, I’d be all for it,” Pizzo stated.
Pizzo represents voters close to the Miami-Dade and Broward County line, and there’s dialogue that he might run for governor.
“My different son is getting into school this fall, and I do not belief his friends, his classmates, to have a gun of their dorm room. I simply do not,” Pizzo stated.
Considered one of Advantageous’s last payments within the Florida legislature failed to maneuver ahead after a 4-3 vote.
Republican state Sen. Ileana Garcia, out of Miami, joined democrats to vote no.
Garcia not too long ago posted on X, half:
“I’ve zero remorse. Proud to have voted in opposition to your moronic campus carry invoice, that did not have a home companion. This choice wasn’t about partisan politics; it was rooted in widespread sense.”
Advantageous posted on X by calling Garcia a “so-called republican.”
Final month, a invoice to decrease the age to purchase a firearm from 21 to 18 handed the state home. To this point, it is unclear if its companion, Senate Invoice 920, will make it onto the ground for a vote.