After a nearly two-hour debate that focused on Florida’s controversial stand your ground law, the state House on Thursday easily passed a bill that would expand the self-defense law to include threatened use of force—including showing a gun or firing a warning shot.

The measure (HB 89) by Rep. Neil Combee, R-Polk City, would extend immunity to people who threaten to use force in self-defense—the same immunity already in law for those who actually shoot people in response to perceived threats.