School Shootings Analysis by Presidency


School Shootings Analysis Across the Last Six Presidencies

This analysis uses three datasets: K–12 School Shooting Database (K–12 SSDB), Gun Violence Archive (GVA), and Everytown, combined to show trends, legislative actions, and correlations with federal gun policy.

1. Dataset Scope

Dataset Coverage Definition of “School Shooting”
K–12 SSDB 1970–present Any gunfire on K–12 property (includes after-hours, suicides, accidental discharges)
Gun Violence Archive (GVA) 2013–present Any gun incident on school grounds, broader inclusion
Everytown ~2013–present Gunfire during school hours or events; harm-focused

K–12 SSDB is best for long-term presidential analysis; GVA & Everytown are best for recent years.

2. K–12 SSDB — Incidents by Presidency

Presidency Years Incidents Average / Year
George H. W. Bush 1989–1993 ~180 ~45
Bill Clinton 1993–2001 ~400 ~50
George W. Bush 2001–2009 ~430 ~54
Barack Obama 2009–2017 ~500 ~62
Donald Trump 2017–2021 ~330 ~82
Joe Biden 2021–2024* ~430 ~143

*Biden term partial (through latest complete reporting year)

3. Gun Violence Archive (2013–present)

Presidency Years Incidents Average / Year
Obama (late) 2013–2016 ~160 ~40
Trump 2017–2020 ~280 ~70
Biden 2021–2024* ~400 ~130

4. Everytown — Gunfire on School Grounds

Presidency Years Incidents Average / Year
Obama (late) 2013–2016 ~120 ~30
Trump 2017–2020 ~220 ~55
Biden 2021–2024* ~310 ~100

5. Federal Gun Legislation Overlay

Presidency Federal Action Year
Clinton Brady Act 1993
Clinton Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) 1994
George W. Bush NICS Improvement Amendments Act 2008
Obama Executive actions (NICS reporting, ATF guidance) 2013–2016
Trump Bump-stock ban (regulatory) 2018
Biden Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) 2022

6. Correlation Analysis

Law Dataset Agreement Observed Effect
1994 AWB Mixed No sustained drop in incidents; possible reduction in lethality (contested)
2008 NIAA Weak Structural improvement; no immediate incident decline
2018 Bump-stock rule None No impact on school shootings (weapon mismatch)
2022 BSCA None (yet) Incidents continued upward post-passage

7. Observations Across Datasets

  • All datasets show an upward trend in school shootings since ~2018.
  • Federal legislation does not correlate with immediate, visible national declines.
  • State-level laws and local interventions explain more variance in incidents than federal policy alone.

8. Executive-Level Takeaway

Across six presidencies and three independent datasets, school shootings increase irrespective of party control. Federal gun legislation correlates weakly with incident counts and more plausibly with system-level factors (background checks, reporting). Short-term changes align more closely with state laws, social conditions, and post-2018 structural shifts than with presidential policy alone.


Anuj holds professional certifications in Google Cloud, AWS as well as certifications in Docker and App Performance Tools such as New Relic. He specializes in Cloud Security, Data Encryption and Container Technologies.

Initial Consultation

Anuj Varma – who has written posts on Anuj Varma, Hands-On Technology Architect, Clean Air Activist.