Trump, other 2024 hopefuls seek NRA's blessing amid spate of shootings
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[April 14, 2023]
By Alexandra Ulmer
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana (Reuters) - White House Republican hopefuls
including Donald Trump descend on Indianapolis for the annual NRA
conference on Friday, highlighting the gun lobby's continued political
potency even as the U.S. reels from the latest spate of mass shootings.
The conference of the National Rifle Association, the country's leading
gun-rights advocacy group, is taking place at a key moment in the
Republican presidential campaign. A number of hopefuls, including
Trump's closest rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, are deliberating
if and when to jump into the 2024 race to challenge the former president
for the nomination.
Trump, whom the NRA enthusiastically backed in 2016 before he was even
officially declared the Republican presidential candidate, will address
gun aficionados in person on Friday.
His former vice president, Mike Pence, seen as another presidential
hopeful, will also speak on Friday. DeSantis, and other White House
hopefuls, Nikki Haley and Senator Tim Scott, will do so by video
message.
The parade of top-tier politicians shows that the NRA event remains a
rite of passage for Republican hopefuls, despite the group itself being
riven by corruption accusations, legal problems and media reports of
dwindling membership.
"The NRA is still the grand-daddy of the guns lobby. The NRA-endorsed
candidate in a Republican primary is very important," said Richard
Feldman, a member and former NRA lobbyist.
Feldman said he expected the NRA to eventually endorse Trump because its
most vocal membership base - which draws heavily from a white, rural and
male population subset - remain supportive of him.
While in office Trump was broadly supportive of gun rights, but angered
some activists in 2018 by banning the high-power gun attachments used in
a 2017 Las Vegas shooting in which dozens of people were killed.
Trump's campaign website says he will "always defend your Second
Amendment right to keep and bear arms," but does not provide detailed
policy proposals.
Even if the NRA does endorse Trump, the group, faced with a major
lawsuit in New York and falling revenue according to some reports, is
unlikely to provide the same financial support as in past elections.
Spending has already decreased: the NRA spent some $54.4 million during
the 2016 election, including $31.2 million for Trump's campaign, but
that fell to $29.1 million in the 2020 cycle, the bulk of it for Trump's
campaign, according to OpenSecrets, a nonpartisan research organization
that tracks U.S. advocacy dollars.
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A former U.S. President Donald Trump
edition of a firearm is displayed at the National Rifle Association
(NRA) annual convention in Houston, Texas, U.S. May 29, 2022.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare/File Photo
SPIKE IN MASS SHOOTINGS
The gun rights lobby has also come under pressure from the at least
149 mass shootings around the country since the start of the year.
In just the last three weeks, two mass shootings killed 11 people,
first at a school in Nashville and then at a bank in Louisville. In
both cases, the shooters purchased their weapons legally.
"Republican primary hopefuls are descending on Indianapolis to
pander to the NRA's extreme leaders for support that will be poison
in a general election," said Shannon Watts, founder of gun control
group Moms Demand Action.
The NRA did not respond to requests for comment.
DeSantis, who is expected to declare his run in coming months, will
likely extol a recent Florida law allowing residents to carry a
concealed firearm without a permit.
He will likely be hoping to strengthen his gun bona fides after the
Washington Post in February reported that he wanted weapons banned
from his victory celebration in Tampa last year, irking gun rights
supporters.
For some fervent NRA members, however, neither Trump nor DeSantis
are committed enough to the cause.
Alan Rice, a firearms instructor in New Hampshire and an NRA member
who will be at the convention, voted for Trump in 2016 but not in
2020, and accuses the men of merely paying lip service to gun
rights.
"DeSantis is a great pretender. Trump is a New Yorker. I believe
people born and bred in New York are raised to hate firearms," said
Rice, who describes himself as a "single-issue voter."
He is hoping New Hampshire's governor, Chris Sununu - who is also
addressing the NRA on Friday - will run.
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer, editing by Ross Colvin and Deepa
Babington)
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