Parkland, Newtown Students End "March For Our Lives" Tour

The nationwide March for Our Lives tour on Sunday in Newtown, Connecticut, six months after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. 

The Road-To-Change bus tour included high school inspired protests calling for what activists say are common-sense gun reforms.

Teenage activists took center stage Sunday as throngs of people gathered to hear them at the Fairfield Hills Campus in Newtown, ten minutes from Sandy Hook Elementary School. 

Teens from Parkland began the March for Our Lives movement in the days after the Feb. 14 shooting at the high school where 17 lives were claimed.

The teens traversing the country with March for Our Lives were on a mission to encourage young people who are turning 18 to register to vote in the November elections. 

They hope to bring about gun-law reforms and weaken the National Rifle Association by changing the makeup of Congress.


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