President Donald Trump said on Friday that the US Constitution was being attacked in the state of Virginia, where lawmakers have been moving to enact tougher gun laws and arms enthusiasts are planning a rally next week.
“Your 2nd Amendment is under very serious attack in the Great Commonwealth of Virginia,” Trump wrote in a post on Twitter, referring to the amendment in the Bill of Rights that gives Americans the right to keep and bear firearms.
The Virginia Senate had on Thursday passed bills to require background checks on all firearms sales, limit handgun purchases to one a month, and restore local governments’ right to ban weapons from public buildings and other venues.
Gun-control activists have reported a growing number of online death threats as the lawmakers press on and ahead of a rally by arms enthusiasts tomorrow in the state capitol of Richmond that authorities are trying to keep from becoming violent.
Democrats promising stronger gun laws took control of the legislature in Virginia in 2019, putting the state at the centre of the contentious American debate around the right to bear arms.
Both Virginia houses are expected to pass the new laws.
Supporters say more restrictive laws would help decrease the number of people killed by guns each year.
Gun-rights activists assert the constitution guarantees their right to possess any firearm.
Militias, neo-Nazis and other groups have vowed to swarm the capitol.
Supporters of the new laws said on Friday that despite a spike in online threats, they will not back down, however.
“These extremists are afraid their guns will be taken away — we’re afraid our children will be taken away,” said Shannon Watts, founder of the Moms Demand Action group that advocates tougher laws. 
“While the rally has grown in size and grown more extreme, what we will see on Monday is a vocal minority.”
Watts said that she and many members of her group and their families had been increasingly threatened online with death and rape, and Virginia members of her organisation have had their home addresses and other personal information shared online, which they have reported to police.
Watts said some members of her group — which is part of Everytown, a 4mn member organisation funded by former New York mayor and presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg — would be on the ground at the rally.
But she said the bulk of their efforts would go to working phone banks and keeping pressure on Virginia legislators to pass the promised gun laws.
“We’ll not be intimidated,” Watts said on a conference call with journalists. “We’ll not back down.”
Philip Van Cleave, leader of the pro-gun Virginia Citizens Defense League, organisers of the rally, has rejected calls for violence while openly welcoming militias from across the United States to provide security for his group.
A spokesman for the Capitol Police said the group has worked closely with law enforcement officers on their rally plans.
Van Cleave and other members of the group did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
On Thursday, the FBI arrested three members of a small neo-Nazi group who authorities said hoped to ignite a race war through violent acts at Monday’s rally, reminiscent of a 2017 white supremacist rally in nearby Charlottesville.
Virginia Governor Ralph Northam on Wednesday declared a state of emergency banning any weapons around the grounds of the capitol from Friday evening until Tuesday evening.
Northam is pushing a package of eight bills on the issue and the lower house, the House of Delegates, is expected to consider them in a single package, with lawmakers waiting to let the dust settle after Monday’s rally before going forward.
The state legislature will be in session through the first week of March.
A lawsuit filed by gun rights groups that requested the ban be knocked down was rejected by the state’s Supreme Court Friday evening.
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