Albany Times Union (Sunday)

As U.S. mourns shootings, NRA in turmoil

Gun rights group’s influence endures despite slaughters

- By Lindsay Whitehurst, Brian Slodysko and Juan Lozano

For a brief moment in 2012, it seemed like a national stalemate over guns was breaking.

Adam Lanza, a 20-yearold gunman, had forced his way into a Connecticu­t elementary school and massacred 26 people, mostly children, with an AR-15-style rifle. Flags flew at half-staff. A sporting goods chain suspended sales of similar weapons. And longtime gunrights supporters from both parties in Congress said they were willing to consider new legislatio­n. The issue was complex, then-President Barack Obama said, but everyone was obligated to try.

Then, one week after the bloodshed at Sandy Hook elementary, the most powerful gun lobby in the U.S. made its public position known and the effort unraveled.

“The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun,” National Rifle Associatio­n CEO Wayne LaPierre said in a defiant speech that blamed video games, cowardly lawmakers, the media and a perverted society for the carnage, while calling for armed guards at schools across the U.S.

Nearly a decade later, the nation is at another crossroads. A gunman killed at least 19 children with a similar weapon at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, on Tuesday in the nation’s second mass killing this month. This time, however, LaPierre didn’t need to address the bloodshed — the organizati­on’s Republican allies in Congress did.

“The problem starts with people. Not with guns.” Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who holds an A-rating and an endorsemen­t from the NRA, told reporters Wednesday, bluntly summing up the position of many in the GOP, especially considerin­g the party’s recent turn further right. “I’m very sorry it happened. But guns are not the problem, OK. People are the problem. That’s where it starts. And we’ve had guns forever, and we’re gonna continue to have guns.”

Much has changed since Sandy Hook. The NRA is on the ropes after a series of costly financial scandals and lawsuits. And an ascendant gun control movement has poured tens of millions of dollars into political campaigns to counter their message. The group Moms Demand Action, for example, was founded the day after the Sandy Hook shooting.

“How many more children have to die?“founder Shannon Watts said this week. “How many parents, teachers, shoppers and worshipper­s, and lives must be taken for our leaders to do something? Any senator who sides with the gun lobby, who blocks life-saving change, is choosing carnage and gun industry profits over the precious lives of our children.”

But even as mass shootings continue unabated, in Washington one thing remains the same: Republican­s and Democrats both agree there is little chance that legislatio­n tightening gun laws will be passed by a narrowly divided Congress. The gridlock, which remains even as public opinion supports some tighter gun laws, offers testament to the enduring influence of

Protesters with signs, and attendees of the National Rifle Associatio­n’s annual convention Saturday in Houston. Gun supporters and protesters mourned two shooting massacres in a single month, but the gap in their views on what to do next remains wide. At right, revolvers are seen on display at the George R. Brown Convention Center during the NRA’s annual convention that comes days after the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas which left 21 dead.

gun rights groups, which have spent $171 million lobbying the federal government since 1989.

“I want to be more optimistic. But I don’t think it will change,” said Sen. Chris Coons, D -Del.

The NRA isn’t the same powerhouse it once was, and in its wake other, further right gun groups have gained, like the Gun Owners of America, which bills itself as the “no compromise” gun lobby. There are multiple gun rights alliances operating at state levels wielding enormous influence in legislatur­es as well. But in 40 years of working to loosen gun laws, the NRA has largely set the cultural tone on the right and is still the most prominent.

“You don’t need the NRA, really, to take the lead anymore because opposition to gun laws is so much now a litmus test of conservati­sm and the Republican Party that it has its own momentum,” said Robert Spitzer, a political science professor at the State University of New York at Cortland and the author of five books on gun policy.

“As we’ve seen it stumble in recent years, it’s not that gun culture has overall become weakened,” adds David Yamane, a sociology professor at Wake Forest University who studies American gun culture. “There’s other membership organizati­ons that have arisen or grown to fill some of the gap that the NRA used to serve.”

The NRA has a built a well of goodwill by disbursing more than $70 million to further the political ambitions of Republican­s who currently serve in Congress, often by running ads attacking Democrats, according to an analysis of data from the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks political spending. They’ve spent a comparativ­ely small $171,000 helping pro-gun Democrats who are currently in the House or Senate, the analysis shows.

The NRA’s gold-standard endorsemen­ts are also sought after by Republican candidates, particular­ly in primary elections, where they serve as a cultural shorthand for what it means to be a conservati­ve. Receiving a poor letter grade from the organizati­on can be a major source of concern.

Still, as the NRA gathered this past week in Houston for its first convention since 2019, current and former board members say the secretive organizati­on must confront a growing crisis.

The New York Attorney General’s office filed a lawsuit seeking to dissolve the organizati­on. Court proceeding­s have revealed how LaPierre and others diverted tens of millions of dollars for lavish personal trips and no-show contracts for associates, among other questionab­le expenditur­es.

That led the organizati­on to file for bankruptcy in 2021. But a judge dismissed the case, which was brought by LaPierre, ruling it was not filed in good faith.

The financial difficulti­es have led to mass layoffs, a reduction in programs and a sharp drop in political spending, which reached an apex in 2016 when the organizati­on spent $54 million, most of it helping Donald Trump win the White House.

NRA contributi­ons have dropped sharply in the past two years, according to data compiled by the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks money in politics.

 ?? Annie Mulligan / New York Times ??
Annie Mulligan / New York Times
 ?? Brandon Bell / Getty Images ??
Brandon Bell / Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States