No. Um, no. Where did that come from? It's called contrast and compare.
To pass a controversial bill requires an effort on the part of someone to actually introduce the bill.
You can gauge the political will to pass a bill based on whether or not legislators care enough to even write the bill.
There is no will to get background checks much less ban guns. Is there will to strip women of their constitutional right to get an abortion? Yes.
Can you see any difference between the two or are we going to stick with the dichotomy where one issue speaks to whether another is a problem? My point is about political will. There is none to ban guns. There isn't even enough will to even do what the American public want.
Poll: 92 percent of gun owners support universal ... - The Hill
Is that clear or are we even communicating?
If that's not clear then let me try this, the vast majority of Americans want universal background checks.
Why did the NRA oppose, and why did the GOP oppose, and why is there no law for universal background checks.
I think if you can tackle that question we will be communicating.
Communicating requires two ways, listening and replying. You're saying something is important in specific contexts with some specific criteria. I said that in very slightly expanded contexts with very little expanded criteria, your point is incorrect.
You're saying that on the federal level there is 'no will' (little to no will) to ban guns, or even to do gun control. Your metric is bills introduced at the federal level. I'm still not convinced about that metric. Comparing it to restricting women's access to abortions won't convince me that your metric is more valid, especially when almost all those challenges come at the state level. At the state level, several gun restrictions have been enacted and several have fallen afoul of constitutional protections, just like abortion access. I still don't see the reason to restrict it to the federal level for either issue.
Like many if not most gun owners at this point, I care little why the NRA does something or not. That there is opposition to the drive for gun bans and very heavy gun restrictions does not mean there are not people who advocate for those things. What I responded to was your view that there aren't people pushing those things.
As far as universal background checks, while Republican/NRA opposition to them plays a part, I think lack of movement on the issue on the federal level is, in part, because it's useful for Dems on the local and state level to push these bills, some/most of which have had unworkable provisions or wording, and have them fail so that they can use them to attack Republicans/NRA. The opposition is more than happy to provide them with this ammo. It's an issue were both sides are behaving badly, even though there is so much agreement in the middle.
Comparing to the abortion access, the mostly if not entirely Republican backed bills are for the same exact effect. They get defeated but they give the backers something to show to their base and attack the 'liberals' with. Unlike with the background check thing though, the opposition doesn't actually provide much ammo as only one side is behaving badly. Of course many of the backers also would actually like to get those restrictions passed. They actually do desire that, just as many actually do desire gun bans or as heavy as restrictions they can get to make guns as difficult to get as possible.
There is will to get universal background checks. I've advocated for them. I also live in a state that bundled banning guns because they are too heavy or have an evil handle instead of less evil handle in with its bill on universal background checks. There is will to ban guns. New York bans sticks as weapons for crying out loud, it would ban guns if it could. 'No political will' vastly overstates the point you are trying to make. 'Not enough' is the best you can say on the federal level.
I get it, there is a lot of mistrust on both sides of this issue. That's one of my biggest complaints as well. However, I'm not about to dismiss the mistrust as unfounded completely. No, on whole democrats are not 'coming for your guns', but yes, there are a non-trivial number who want gun bans. Yes, the NRA and some other gun owners want absolutely no movement on gun control, and want restrictions removed, but no, not all or even most gun owners are like that.
tl;dr There are many mechanisms driving the introduction, or lack of, bills besides political will being 'none'. Politics isn't that simple.