Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern discussed New Zealand’s swift gun control reforms following the Christchurch mosque attacks as she responded to Tuesday’s Texas school shooting during an appearance on CBS’ “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”
What she’s saying: Ardern told host Stephen Colbert she viewed what happened at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde not as a politician but as a mother. “I’m so sorry for what has happened here,” she said. “And then I think about what happened to us, and all I can reflect is: We are a very pragmatic people.
- “We saw something that wasn’t right and we acted on it, and I can only speak to that experience,” Ardern continued. “When we saw something like that happen, everyone said, ‘Never again.’ And so then it was incumbent on us as politicians to respond to that.
- “Now, we have legitimate needs for guns in our country for things like peace control and to protect our biodiversity, but you don’t need a military-style semiautomatic weapon to do that. And so we got rid of that,” she added.
Flashback: Days after the March 2019 mass shooting, Ardern announced a nationwide ban on all military-style semiautomatic weapons that NZ’s Parliament passed the following month and a firearms buyback scheme saw thousands of guns handed over to police.
Source:axios.com