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		 NRA's 
		Tennessee meeting draws Republican hopefuls 
		
		 
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		[April 11, 2015] 
		By Tim Ghianni 
		  
		 NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Reuters) - Republicans, 
		guns and money will dominate a National Rifle Association meeting that 
		starts on Thursday and is expected to attract about 70,000 people to 
		Nashville, organizers said. 
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			 The gathering includes a forum on Friday with a dozen prominent 
			Republicans, including announced presidential candidate U.S. Senator 
			Ted Cruz of Texas and others who are expected to seek the Republican 
			nomination in 2016. 
			 
			"They vote. They talk to their friends. They organize. They make 
			sure their friends know who is protecting gun rights and who is 
			not," Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler said of NRA members. "We hope they 
			will help get the vote out for Ted Cruz." 
			 
			Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, 
			former Texas Governor Rick Perry, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, 
			Indiana Governor Mike Pence and Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal also 
			are among expected speakers at the forum. 
			  
			  
			 
			"NRA members are a solid and savvy voting bloc who can make a 
			difference in any local, state, federal or even national-based 
			campaign," NRA spokesman Andrew Arulanandam said. 
			 
			U.S. Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky also has launched a bid for the 
			2016 Republican nomination for president. He is not on the list of 
			forum speakers. 
			 
			The NRA meeting runs Thursday to Sunday and includes 550 vendors 
			peddling guns and accessories on nine acres of floor space, 
			Arulanandam said. Weapons brought by vendors are non-operational, 
			and security is tight, he said. 
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			The meeting comes as Tennessee lawmakers debate a measure that would 
			allow people to carry guns in parks statewide. Supporters had hoped 
			the measure would be law before the NRA meeting, but it is now in 
			committee. 
			 
			The NRA convention is expected to generate at least $10 million for 
			Nashville's economy, said Butch Spyridon, president and CEO of the 
			Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp. 
			 
			"They will spend a lot when they are here," Spyridon said. "We do 
			know that's a pretty well-heeled financially group and they are 
			going to entertain themselves." 
			 
			(Editing by David Bailey) 
			
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