Conor Webb
Conor Webb
ABOUT
I am a student at Yale University and a gun violence prevention advocate from Albany, New York. From 2021 to 2024, I led the Capital Region chapter of March For Our Lives, a youth-led movement founded in the wake of the Parkland massacre. In that role, I fought for community-centered, comprehensive reform—from secure firearm storage to historic investments in violence intervention programs—while shifting how gun safety is understood in both politics and public life.
My advocacy includes public testimony, legislative lobbying, youth voter registration, and community mobilization in New York and beyond. I most recently served on Project Unloaded's Youth Council, an evidence-backed initiative changing perceptions of gun ownership among young people.
Beyond frontline organizing, I contribute writing and strategic guidance to campaigns working toward a most just, more accountable, more courageous government. Too often, our leaders speak with clarity and conviction, but act with neither. I fight to bring the same seriousness, care, and moral clarity to the field as I do to the page.
(Also: a proudly unrepentant seltzer enthusiast and recovering participant in whatever Twitter has now become.)
IMPACT
With March For Our Lives, I helped lead marches, publish op-eds, testify at public hearings, and lobby elected officials in both Albany and Washington. In Albany County, we secured funding for gun buyback programs, anonymous tip lines, and gun suicide awareness. Statewide, we contributed to the passage of dozens of gun violence prevention laws over the past half decade, including trauma-informed lockdown drills. Nationally, I've worked with physicians to help strengthen their legislative advocacy through compassionate personal narrative and storytelling.
In 2025, I launched Fight for Higher Ed, a student-led coalition opposing federal increases to the university endowment tax. The House proposal would have raised the university endowment tax up to 21%. After our emergency mobilization of financial aid recipients across campuses nationwide, the Senate revised the proposal downward to 8%. For Yale alone, that change represents an estimated $420 million that can now be allocated toward supporting first-generation and limited-income students. (Preliminary estimates suggested Yale would have owed approximately $700,000,000 to the Treasury under the House bill, compared to $280,000,000 under the final bill.)
I write for The Politic on gun policy and American culture, and have moderated public conversations with leading advocates, policymakers, and storytellers: Rev. Al Sharpton, state executives, constitutional scholars, and state legislators on the front lines of reform.
CONTACT
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