
[B]RATTLEBORO โ Even as she founded GunSense Vermont in early 2013, Ann Braden considered herself an unlikely leader for a political movement.
So it wasn’t necessarily a difficult decision for the Brattleboro resident to step away from that group recently to pursue two other interests: the publication of her first novel and preparation for her first state Senate campaign.
Braden said GunSense has made progress despite the fact that state lawmakers have not passed a universal background check law, the group’s central policy goal.
But she believes it is the right time, both for GunSense and for herself, to move in a new direction.
โI was wearing the advocate hat because someone needed to, but there are a lot of issues I care about that I want to be working on,โ Braden said.
Her name has become synonymous with Vermont’s gun debate over the past four years or so. But the former middle school social studies teacher said she entered that fray without any intention of becoming a public figure.
Braden was a stay-at-home mom of two young children in Brattleboro when 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot and killed 20 children and six adults on Dec. 14, 2012, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
Feeling like she should take some kind of action, Braden and her husband demonstrated for tougher gun laws in downtown Brattleboro shortly after Newtown. They later attended a march in Washington, D.C.
โAfter that, โI felt, OK, well, we did something. I felt kind of like I had done what I needed to do,โ Braden recalled. โBut at the end of the march, one of the organizers said, ‘When you go back home, try to do one thing every day for this issue.’โ
That exhortation stuck with her, as did the memorials Braden saw when she visited her mother and stepfather in Newtown. She resolved to stay involved with gun issues when she returned home.

It was a lesson in โhow powerful it is when people come together,โ Braden said. But it also was a lesson in how quickly an average citizen could get swept up in a contentious political issue.
โI was really naive, which helps you get into a tough issue,โ she said with a laugh.
The group pushed for background checks for all gun purchases. The lack of mandatory background checks for private sales โ such as online or at gun shows โ is a โdangerous loopholeโ that allows weapons to more easily fall into the hands of criminals, Braden argued at a Statehouse news conference in early 2015.
Braden sees that as a watershed year for GunSense, although a bill that eventually passed didn’t mandate universal background checks. Instead, it contained provisions designed to stop gun purchases by people with certain criminal convictions or severe mental illness.
Though universal background checks weren’t part of the final mix, โthe fact that we were able to get it on the agenda was progress,โ Braden said. โThat by itself was a huge success.โ
โIt was amazing to have reasonable people discussing the issue of guns,โ she added.
That discussion, however, continues to be a difficult one. Groups like Gun Owners of Vermont and the Vermont Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs have staunchly opposed GunSense’s lobbying efforts.
Evan Hughes, the federation’s vice president, argues that expanded background checks legislation โis a solution in search of a problemโ and does not represent good public policy.
โThe background checks that are being promoted are not ‘universal,’ as the majority of states do not require these checks,โ Hughes said. โThey are also not ‘universal,’ as violent criminals simply evade them.โ
Expanded background checks surfaced again in the Legislature in 2017, but the initiative did not have much traction.
The fight apparently is not over: In a recent statement, GunSense Acting Executive Director Clai Lasher-Sommers said she and board members will work to โstreamline the organization’s operations and increase its capacity over the coming months to continue the fight for universal background checks.โ
Lasher-Sommers also lauded Braden’s work with GunSense on that issue.
โThe people of Vermont owe Ann a debt of gratitude for opening the door to conversations and legislation that will ultimately improve public safety for all Vermonters, as well as people beyond its borders,โ Lasher-Sommers said.
Braden believes GunSense represents โa movement that has helped rebalance the landscape.โ But she’s ready to turn the page.
That will happen literally in one sense, as Braden’s first novel is scheduled for publication next fall.
Meant for a โmiddle gradeโ audience, the book โ tentatively titled โZoey and the Screaming Monkeysโ โ tells of a 12-year-old who is struggling to make her way amid poverty in southern Vermont.
โThe world is throwing all sorts of stuff at her, and she has to find a way to realize that she’s actually stronger than people are telling her she is and that she can find her own voice,โ Braden said.
It’s not too far of a stretch to connect one of the book’s themes to the verbal abuse Braden said she has endured as the leader of a gun control group.
โOne of the issues in this book is emotional abuse,โ she said. โI’ve only had a hint of it, but I’ve worked closely with women who are victims of domestic violence. And that has been the inspiration โ the strength that they have to keep going and to find the path forward.โ
Braden believes her path forward also should include elective office: She’s planning a state Senate run in 2020.
She’s interested in issues like addressing Vermont’s opiate addiction crisis and curbing the state’s rising health care costs.
โI’m fascinated by figuring out how we can reduce them,โ Braden said on the latter topic. โBecause I think it’s this bubble that’s pushing everything out of whack.โ
Braden will dip a toe into state politics by serving as a policy liaison for the Vermont Democratic Party during the coming legislative session. But she believes a run for office in 2018 would be premature.
โI’m really excited to spend the next 2ยฝ years listening to all kinds of people,โ Braden said. โI want the time to really know the issues inside and out.โ
