DeSantis Signs Florida Constitutional Carry Into Law

Florida joined 25 other states Monday after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed permitless concealed carry legislation, often referred to as “Constitutional Carry,” into law.

The newly-enacted bill, HB 543, allows Floridians to carry a concealed weapon without a permit, bolstering Second Amendment rights throughout the state. However, the bill leaves in place previous background check requirements.

“Constitutional Carry is in the books,” DeSantis said in a statement accompanying the press release.

The legislation requires that those who carry without a permit have valid ID on their person and readily provide it to law enforcement if asked, the law reads. Nonresidents are also allowed to carry a concealed firearm if they meet the same requirements as Floridians.

Permit-holders will no longer be required to carry their license on them while in possession of a concealed firearm, according to the law. The Office of Safe Schools is now required to create a “behavioral threat management operational process,” the law reads. This provision comes after last week’s Nashville, Tennessee school shooting where 3 students and 3 adults were shot and killed.

That makes 26 states, including two of the largest. Pretty remarkable progress for gun-rights activists considering 40 years ago it was illegal to concealed carry nearly everywhere.

Florida’s legislative session began on March 7 and will conclude on May 5, and has a long list of GOP-backed bills the governor is pushing through ahead of an expected 2024 presidential announcement. DeSantis recently signed a bill that created a universal school choice program and introduced legislation to ban abortion after 6 weeks gestation.

Two pieces of legislation were introduced to expand on the Parental Rights in Education bill by focusing on LGBTQ students and the use of preferred pronouns. Teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity would be restricted from K – 8, as opposed to the previous K – 3.

The concealed carry law will go into effect on July 1.

* Article From: The Daily Caller