​Scores of the nation’s top CEOs are urging the Republican-controlled Senate to take action to curtail gun violence after the mass shootings in Texas and Ohio.

“Doing nothing about America’s gun violence crisis is simply unacceptable and it is time to stand with the American public on gun safety,” ​the leaders of 145 companies said in a letter sent Thursday, the New York Times reported.

​The companies, including Airbnb, Levi Strauss, Twitter and Uber, ​called on the lawmakers to expand background check and “red flag” laws.

Also among the signers is Thrive Capital, the venture capital firm founded by Joshua Kushner, the brother of top White House adviser and President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

“The Senate must follow the House’s lead by passing bipartisan legislation that would update the background checks law, helping to keep guns out of the hands of people who shouldn’t have them, in an effort to save lives,” the business leaders wrote in the letter shared with the Times.

“Background checks on all gun sales are a common-sense solution with overwhelming public support and are a critical step toward stemming the gun violence epidemic in this country,” the letter continued.

​Senate Majority Leader ​Mitch McConnell told reporters Tuesday that the Trump administration was working on a proposal for legislation that the president would sign.

Until then, the Kentucky Republican said, ​”all of this is theatrics.”

He reiterated his stand that he’s waiting to see what Trump would support before putting a measure on the Senate floor.

“We’re waiting for something we know if it passed would actually become law and until the White House gives us some indication of what the president is willing to sign, we’re waiting to see what it looks like,” ​McConnell said.​

Trump, speaking at the White House on Wednesday, said his administration will “take a look at a lot of different things.”

“It’s really ​’​gun sense,​’​ if you think about it. What we’re looking at is — and maybe that’s what we should call it, ‘The Gun Sense Bill.​’​ But we will have some — we’re having great dialogue. We’ll see what happens,” the president said.