Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris participated in a CNN town hall on Monday night. Among many highlights, the senator from California promised to take executive action on gun safety policies if Congress was unable to pass comprehensive legislation within her first 100 days in office.

And it wasn’t just a promise to do this, either. She previewed an entire plan. According to a campaign aid, as reported by CBS News, Harris plans to release the full proposal on Tuesday. For context, it’s worth noting that this is her second big policy reveal, the first being her proposal to increase teacher salaries using federal dollars.

CBS reports that they obtained a copy of the plan. According to CBS, the senator’s plan wants “near-universal” background checks and the ability to revoke licenses from dealers and gun manufacturers who break laws. By the way: Harris's plan would instruct the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to define a "gun dealer" pretty simply … and pretty strictly. Basically, a “gun dealer” would be anyone who sells five or more guns for profit in one year.

Perhaps most exciting, Harris’s plan aims to close the “loopholes” which allow people convicted of domestic violence to get guns. (Why this is not already on the books is pretty baffling—and dangerous.) As of right now, if you were married to someone convicted of domestic violence, lived with them, or had a child with them, they can’t purchase a gun.

That makes sense, but it isn’t truly comprehensive. And that’s where the “loophole” comes in: if your abuser is your boyfriend, girlfriend, or other forms of significant other that don’t fall into the above categories, the current laws fail you. Semi-relatedly, this would also prevent people who have arrest warrants from obtaining guns.

Perhaps nothing sells her idea better than hearing Harris put it in her own words. Here’s what she said in New Hampshire on Monday: