Trump back in step with NRA after doubts
over Parkland shooting
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[May 05, 2018]
By Jeff Mason and Daniel Trotta
DALLAS (Reuters) - President Donald Trump
enthusiastically embraced the National Rifle Association on Friday,
vowing not to tighten U.S. firearms laws despite suggesting after a
Florida school shooting that he would take on the powerful gun-rights
group.
At the NRA's annual convention in Dallas, Trump called again for arming
teachers and increasing school security to head off future mass
shootings like the one in Parkland, Florida in February that killed 17
people. Such measures are supported by the NRA.
With Republican control of the U.S. Congress up for grabs in November's
midterm elections, Trump used the NRA platform to return to rhetoric he
used in 2016 to excite pro-gun voters, warning that Democrats are
determined to take away Americans' guns.
Trump made no mention of gun-control proposals he tentatively floated in
the past, such as raising the age limit for buying rifles. The NRA
opposes that and other limits on gun sales as a violation of the right
to gun ownership under the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Democratic lawmakers generally support tighter gun laws, but specific
proposals that they favor, such as universal background checks and a ban
on military-style "assault" rifles, would not alter the Second
Amendment.
"Your Second Amendment rights are under siege. But they will never, ever
be under siege as long as I'm your president," Trump told the cheering
crowd. "We've got to get Republicans elected."
"The one thing that stands between Americans and the elimination of our
Second Amendment rights has been conservatives in Congress," he said.
The Parkland massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14
seemed to have marked a turning point in America's long-running gun
debate, sparking a youth-led movement for tighter gun controls.
Days after the shooting, Trump promised action on gun regulation and at
a gathering of state officials, he said of the NRA: "We have to fight
them every once in a while."
But since then, no major new federal gun controls have been imposed,
although the administration is pursuing a proposed regulatory ban on
"bump stocks," which enable a semi-automatic rifle to fire a steady
stream of bullets. The devices were used in an October 2017 mass
shooting in Las Vegas that killed 59 people.
"I’m not happy with the bump stock issue, but overall I’m very happy
with him. Best president yet," said Florida accountant Richard Brinkman,
62, who watched Trump's speech.
As Trump spoke, shares rose in major gun makers Sturm Ruger & Co and
American Outdoor Brands, maker of Smith & Wesson firearms. The shares
have climbed since Parkland, which prompted concerns of tighter gun
controls. Gun sales typically surge on such concerns after mass
shootings.
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President Donald Trump speaks at a National Rifle Association (NRA)
convention in Dallas, Texas, U.S. May 4, 2018. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
"Our hearts break for every American who has suffered the horrors of
this school shooting," Trump said of the Parkland shooting.
RHETORICAL SHIFT
Since Parkland, Trump has largely moved his rhetoric back in line
with the NRA, which spent $55 million to support him and other
Republican candidates in the 2016 elections, according to the Center
for Responsive Politics, a campaign finance watchdog.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll found in March 2018 that 54 percent of adults
wanted "strong regulations or restrictions" for firearms. That was
up from 39 percent in a similar poll from April 2012.
Among Republicans in the poll, 40 percent wanted strong regulations
or restrictions, up from 22 percent in April 2012.
Trump met with NRA officials privately at the White House twice in
February as he mulled policy responses to the shooting.
He initially expressed support for measures that would extend the
background check system to all gun purchases, raise the age limit
for buying rifles, and seize guns temporarily from people reported
to be dangerous.
Trump has since endorsed more modest proposals, such as legislation
aimed at providing more data for the background check system. He did
not endorse closing a loophole in existing law that would require
background checks for guns bought at guns shows or sales arranged
over the internet.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Daniel Trotta; Writing by Andy
Sullivan; Additional reporting by Chris Kahn; Editing by Kevin
Drawbaugh and Alistair Bell)
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