As teenage activists pushed for gun control legislation across the nation following the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, they showed the nation that the gun-lobbying National Rifle Association was not all-powerful.

But, for all the outrage surrounding the gun lobby in recent weeks, the NRA still succeeded in passing a handful of small yet significant pro-gun laws, as noted in a legislative analysis on April 18 from Newsweek. Despite the progress for gun control activists, laws that are both controversial and commonplace are still appearing in state legislatures.

Idaho and Wyoming passed “stand your ground” laws.

In Idaho and Wyoming, legislation was passed to legalize “stand your ground” in the case of self-defense. Basically, the so-called law allows a person to shoot for self-defense if they believe they are defending their home, a place of business, or an occupied vehicle, according to Idaho law. The Wyoming News noted that the state’s “stand your ground” law passed after a “hard-fought legislative effort” from the NRA and other Second Amendment advocates, but it does very little to change the state’s criminal justice system.

The “stand your ground” laws are controversial because they remove the notion that citizens should flee a potentially dangerous situation if they fear for their lives. According to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, the laws should more appropriately be nicknamed the “shoot first” law. The gun proposal is especially controversial because of the prevalence of racial profiling in America.

A similar Florida law was used as a defense by George Zimmerman after the killing of Trayvon Martin in 2012. Martin, a black teenager, was shot and killed while walking through a Florida community by Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch member who later claimed self-defense against the 17-year-old wearing a black hoodie and carrying a bag of Skittles. Zimmerman was found not guilty of second-degree murder and acquitted on manslaughter charges.

Ohio lawmakers pushed their own “stand your ground” legislation, but Republican Governor John Kasich said in February that he refused to support it.

“If I think it’s going to endanger the public, I’m not going to sign it,” Kasich told NBC’s Meet the Press on February 25. “For example, there’s talk now in my state about changing ‘stand your ground.’ I said, ‘I’m not signing it. Don’t give it to me.’”

West Virginia will allow legal guns to be stored inside of cars in parking lots.

A bipartisan law in West Virginia called the Business Liability Protection Act will allow workers who legally possess a firearm to keep it locked inside of their car when it is parked in their employer’s parking lot.

The NRA-backed law prohibits employers from searching vehicles on their property for firearms or taking action against an employee who legally possesses and stores a firearm in their car. The bill also provides immunity to employers from being sued by an individual for not preventing guns on their property. At least 23 states have legalized similar legislation, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

Other NRA-backed laws have been less successful.

Several other NRA-supported gun laws have advanced from various state legislative chambers, but are not yet legalized and will likely face greater obstacles.

Colorado’s Senate approved a bill that would repeal restrictions on the number of ammunition magazines, but it is unlikely to get support in the Democrat-controlled Colorado House of Representatives or from Democratic Governor John Hickenlooper. Hickenlooper has supported the Parkland-backed gun control legislation, telling Colorado Public Radio that “we as adults can listen to their logic or we can turn our backs to it. But I think people, especially elected officials, will be turning their backs at their own risk.”

Other states, including Vermont, are banning large-capacity gun magazines. Vermont will face a NRA-backed legal challenge that claims the restrictions violate the rights of gun owners under the Vermont Constitution, according to the Bennington Banner.

The NRA lost some influence in the weeks following the shooting as corporations severed ties with the organization. At the urging of students, Florida, a traditionally gun-friendly state, passed a new law that raised the age to buy a rifle to 21 years old, introduced a three-day waiting period on gun sales, and increased state funding for mental health services. Even with the new legislation, students from Parkland only gave their government a “C” or “C-minus” grade and continues to push greater gun legislation designed to stop future mass shootings.

Gun control activists haven’t let up on the NRA. Just this week, March for Our Lives released new price tags that call out the NRA’s political donations both in states and nationally.

Related: Florida Governor Rick Scott Is Getting Sued by Teens for His Environmental Policies

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