​​Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand on Sunday said they will ​put on a “full court press” ​to force the GOP-controlled Senate to take up gun safety measures by inviting ​an array of speakers — including survivors of ​​mass shootings — to tell their tales.

“We’re here to tell leader McConnell enough is enough, we’re here to tell leader McConnell we do not want this legislation to sit in his legislation graveyard and if he does the right thing the American people will cheer​,” Schumer said at a news conference Sunday, referring to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

“If he does the wrong thing, he will go down in history as somebody who is so afraid that he will not prevent future deaths from gun violence​,” the New York Democrat continued. ​

Gillibrand, who pulled out of the Democratic presidential race last month, questioned why McConnell was waiting to take up gun legislation after the recent shootings in Texas and Ohio.

​”Shame on Mitch McConnell and shame on Congress for standing and doing nothing and turning a blind eye to real suffering,” she said.

Robert Gaafar, a Long Island man who survived the 2017 Las Vegas massacre that killed 58 people and wounded more than 400, will be one of the people telling their story to the Senate.

“When you experience gun violence, it makes you see the world differently. I don’t want to live in a country where mass shootings become American as apple pie or where guns are worshiped like idols and the protection of life becomes secondary,” the 35-year-old Gaafar said. “It’s like we’re becoming one nation under gun.”

Schumer and Gillibrand spoke in Manhattan just hours after Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced they had sent a letter to President Trump urging him to back background check legislation the Democratic-controlled House already passed.

“Every day that Senator McConnell blocks our House-passed, life-saving bills, an average of 100 people — including 47 children and teenagers — die from senseless gun violence,” the Democrats wrote, adding that an estimated 20,000 Americans have died from gun violence since the House passed the bill on Feb. 27.

The Democratic leaders said if he gets McConnell to pass the legislation, they would “both join him for a historic signing ceremony at the Rose Garden.”

White House spokesman Judd Deere said the president and the lawmakers had a “cordial” conversation.

Trump ​made no commitments but ​​”indicated his interest in working to find a bipartisan legislative solution on appropriate responses to the issue of mass gun violence​,” Deere said in a statement.​

Counselor to the ​P​resident Kellyanne Conway ​was more forceful, saying Democrats shouldn’t use the mass shootings to take firearms from law-abiding people.

“We’re not going to allow bad actors who should not have firearms in the first place, who then murder innocent Americans, to be an excuse for a bunch of liberals and socialists have to confiscate firearms from law-abiding citizens who have legally procured them,” ​she said on “Fox News Sunday.”

With additional reporting by Nikki Schwab​