What's in the Trump administration's "tsunami" of gun deregulation

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The https://www.axios.com/politics-policy/donald-trump" target="_blank">Trump administration is undertaking the https://www.axios.com/2026/04/26/trump-white-house-correspondents-dinner-gun-laws" target="_blank">broadest firearm deregulation in years, a sweeping rollback that would let Americans ship handguns in the mail, gut Biden-era background check rules and make it harder to yank a gun dealer's license.

Why it matters: The effect critics fear is more guns moving with less federal scrutiny under the proposed dismantling of a 1927 criminal statute and dozens of newer rules, including https://www.axios.com/2023/09/22/biden-gun-violence-prevention-democrats" target="_blank">President Biden's effort to close the so-called gun show loophole.


  • The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives argues the proposed changes reduce burdens on gun owners without undermining law enforcement.
  • But gun violence prevention advocates stress the rollbacks benefit the gun industry at the expense of public safety.

Driving the news: In late April, the ATF https://www.atf.gov/news/press-releases/doj-and-atf-announce-regulatory-reforms-to-reduce-burdens-law-abiding-gun-owners-and-businesses" target="_blank">unveiled nearly three dozen final and proposed rules it pitched as "modernizing" regulations.

Yes, but: A recent https://www.thetrace.org/2026/06/atf-gun-show-loophole-rule-repeal/" target="_blank">investigation from The Trace of cases in which prosecutors charged people for dealing firearms without a license found that the Biden-era rule didn't meaningfully enhance enforcement.

Zoom out: Other proposed changes would make it https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/08/2026-09161/interstate-transport-and-temporary-export-of-national-firearms-act-firearms" target="_blank">easier to https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/06/2026-08916/clarifying-interstate-transportation-of-firearms-under-the-gun-control-act" target="_blank">transport firearms, remove the mandate that licensed sellers provide youth handgun safety https://regulations.atf.gov/static/atf_eregs/5300_1.pdf" target="_blank">notices, and https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/08/2026-09159/defining-willfully-for-firearms-violations" target="_blank">clarify standards in ways that critics say will make it harder to revoke dealers' licenses.

The fine print: The ATF acknowledged in its own proposal that some changes could endanger people.

Reality check: The policy shift isn't a huge surprise, says Joseph Blocher, Duke University's faculty director of the Center for Firearms Law.

  • But it's also a "major, major, major pivot from what we saw from '21 through '25."

What they're saying: Gun industry and Second Amendment advocates celebrated the long-sought changes.

Lawrence G. Keane, the National Sports Shooting Foundation senior vice president, https://www.nssf.org/articles/nssf-welcomes-atf-landmark-rulemaking-package/" target="_blank">described the regulatory rollback as "the dawning of a new era."

The other side: Daniel Webster, a professor at Johns Hopkins' Center for Gun Violence Solutions, argues the proposed rules favor the gun industry over public safety.

The bottom line: The exact impact of the proposals and their final forms are yet to be seen, but opponents say they amount to a tsunami of deregulation.

  • But Brown's prediction is grim: "We think it is going to be the worst delivery of regression in the history of the country in terms of gun violence prevention."

Go deeper: https://www.axios.com/2025/03/18/hhs-removes-surgeon-general-gun-violence-memo" target="_blank">HHS drops surgeon general's advisory on gun violence

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