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Republicans Renew Multi‑State Campus Carry Push After Recent College Shootings

Republican lawmakers in at least eight states are advancing or debating legislation in 2026 to allow firearms on college campuses, citing recent mass shootings at Old Dominion University in Virginia and Brown University in Rhode Island as proof that students and faculty are "helpless" under current gun‑free‑zone rules. The article details Florida measures that would let public‑college students, faculty and staff carry guns, including a House bill authorizing trained faculty and staff that is already on the governor’s desk, and a Senate bill that would extend carry rights more broadly. In Louisiana, a bill authored in part by GOP Rep. Danny McCormick would remove higher‑education institutions from the state’s list of gun‑free zones and allow any legal adult to carry on campus, with sponsors arguing this simply aligns campuses with existing carry law. The piece notes that more than a dozen states already permit some form of campus carry, while university presidents and other critics warn that expanding guns on campus introduces new safety risks, accidental‑shooting concerns and financial burdens for security upgrades. The political fight is unfolding amid heightened public anxiety and social‑media debate following the Old Dominion attack by a convicted felon linked to ISIS and the Brown shooting that left multiple students dead and injured, with both sides using those incidents to argue either for more armed "good guys" or for tightening access to guns near classrooms.

Gun Policy and Campus Safety State-Level Firearms Legislation

📌 Key Facts

  • In 2026, lawmakers in at least eight states — including Florida, Louisiana, New Hampshire, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming — are considering bills to expand or allow gun carry on college campuses.
  • A convicted felon linked to ISIS killed one teacher and wounded two others in a March 12, 2026 classroom shooting at Old Dominion University before being subdued by ROTC cadets; in December 2025, a gunman killed two students and injured nine others at Brown University.
  • Florida’s House has passed a bill, pending the governor’s approval, that would authorize trained faculty and staff to carry guns on public college campuses, while a separate Senate bill would allow students, faculty and staff to carry.
  • Louisiana Republicans have introduced a broad campus carry bill that would allow any legal adult to carry guns on college campuses and would strike colleges from the state’s gun‑free‑zone list.
  • More than a dozen states, including Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming, already allow some form of campus carry, though regulations vary widely.

📊 Relevant Data

Between 1982 and March 2026, 55% of mass shooting perpetrators in the US were White, 17% were Black, and 8% were Latino, based on 153 incidents.

Mass shootings by shooter's race in the U.S. 2026 — Statista

The average age of mass shooters in the US is 34.5 years, and they are typically male and racially/ethnically diverse.

Mass Shooting Factsheet — Rockefeller Institute of Government

In 2026, there were at least 21 incidents of gunfire on school grounds in the US, resulting in 7 deaths and 9 injuries, including college campuses.

Gunfire on School Grounds in the United States — Everytown Research

A 2025 study found no significant changes in crime rates following state implementation of permissive campus carry laws.

Effects of implementing permissive campus carry laws on rates of crime — PMC (National Library of Medicine)

Black college students are more likely (44%) than Latino (34%) or White students (30%) to report having seen or experienced more discrimination on campus, according to a 2024 survey.

1 in 3 College Students Report Increased Discrimination This Year — BestColleges

Of 757 reported hate crimes on US college campuses in recent data, more than 400 were motivated by race or ethnicity.

Department of Education's Latest Data on Campus Hate Crimes — JBHE (Journal of Blacks in Higher Education)

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