Monday
June, 8

Florida Kicks Off Session With Pro-Gun Bills On Tap

Featured in:

The Florida Legislature kicked off its 2025 session on Tuesday with a number of pro-gun measures on the docket, some rolling back restrictions that were passed back in 2018 after the mass murder at a high school in Parkland, Florida.

Following that shooting, the state legislature passed a law raising the minimum age to purchase a firearm from a licensed dealer from 18 to 21 years of age. Since then, the National Rifle Association and other pro-rights groups have continually fought the law in court to get it overturned.

Now, a series of bills— Senate Bill 94Senate Bill 920Senate Bill 1716, and House Bill 759—would do just that, restoring the ability for young adults to acquire firearms by lowering the minimum age requirement to purchase from 21 to 18.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis supports the measure. He addressed the age limitation during his State of the State address on March 4.

“I can tell you that we, in spite of us saying we’re the Free State, in spite of us being like, ‘Oh, we’re this Republican conservative bastion,’ we’ve definitely lagged on that issue,” Gov. DeSantis said. “The free state of Florida has not exactly led the way on protecting Second Amendment rights. We need to be a strong Second Amendment state.”

Of course, there are plenty of detractors in the Florida legislature poised to try to halt the legislation’s momentum. They include House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, who said restoring the gun purchase age would be dangerous, despite the fact that the vast majority of states have no such law.

“[The changes] would be awful for our law enforcement,” she told wusf.org. “We absolutely want to keep them safe as they do their job. I was very troubled by his comments.”

Incidentally, Gov. DeSantis has also voiced his support for repealing the state’s red-flag law and allowing open carry. Earlier this year, he proposed what he called “Second Amendment Summer,” which would eliminate the sales tax on the purchase of guns, ammunition, and accessories from Memorial Day to the 4th of July. 

Another pro-gun-rights measure under consideration, Senate Bill 952/House Bill 6025, would address the problematic laws Florida has on the books regarding possession of firearms during and after emergencies. In a nutshell, the bills would repeal automatic prohibitions that violate Floridians’ Second Amendment rights during a public disorder state of local emergency. 

State law currently prohibits the intentional possession of a firearm in public, the sale of any ammunition or firearms and the intentional display of ammunition or firearms in a store during an emergency. The legislation addresses all three dangerous restrictions and would strike them from the books.

Latest articles

Related articles

Bear Creek Arsenal BC-15 Pistol in .338 ARC

Bear Creek Arsenal launched its line of bolt action upper AR rifles and pistols at SHOT Show...

Olight’s Updated ArkPro Ultra EDC Flashlight

I’ll be upfront: I’ve been a longtime Olight doubter. On top of that, I find it incredibly...

Why Flintlock Muskets Aren’t Regulated Like AR-15s

With the 250th anniversary of American independence less than two months away, Revolutionary War reenactors are loading...

ATF Director Addresses Brace Rule and Reform

ATF Director Robert Cekada and Chief Counsel Robert Leider sat down with journalist Shermichel Singleton for a...

Minneapolis Gun Ordinance Likely Violates State Law

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signed a sweeping gun control ordinance on Wednesday that bans semiautomatic rifles classified...

Virginia Assault Weapon Ban Faces Federal Lawsuit

The Second Amendment Foundation, joined by the National Rifle Association, Firearms Policy Coalition, and two private plaintiffs,...