Dayton Daily News

United, Delta cut ties to NRA as boycott movement spreads

Airlines, car rental agencies, banks end NRA discounts.

- By Lindsey Bever, Fred Barbash, Avi Selk Washington Post

Delta and United — two of the largest airlines in the world — have joined a growing list of companies cutting ties with the National Rifle Associatio­n amid a growing boycott movement inspired by the Feb. 14 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School with a legally purchased AR-15 rifle.

Without context, the airlines’ twin announceme­nts Saturday morning might look trivial: The end of a discount program for NRA members, which few outside the gun rights organizati­on likely knew existed before the boycott efforts.

But because they follow similar announceme­nts by car rental giants Avis, Hertz and Enterprise, the Best Western hotel chain, the global insurance company MetLife, and more than a dozen other corporatio­ns that used to contract, partner or otherwise affiliate with the NRA, the airline’s move is the latest victory for the #BoycottNRA movement — and the latest bad omen for a gun rights lobby that had seemed untouchabl­e less than two weeks ago.

The speed with which the companies have abandoned the NRA is also a testament to how abruptly the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, has disrupted U.S. gun culture.

Hours before the airline reversed itself Saturday, a Delta spokesman had defended its discount for NRA members traveling to the group’s convention in May. In a statement to the liberal outlet ThinkProgr­ess, the spokesman had called the contract “routine” for large groups, adding that it “has more than 2,000 such contracts in place.”

The NRA claims 5 million members, takes in tens of millions of dollars each year through membership­s, and devotes massive resources to fighting gun regulation­s in the name of constituti­onal protection­s that guarantee Americans the right to bear arms.

The group has faced public anger before — after the massacre of schoolchil­dren at Sandy Hook Elementary in 2012, for example. But it has always fought back against pushes for gun-law reforms, and efforts to significan­tly restrict firearms inevitably die out as public fury over the shootings ebbs.

But outrage over the Parkland shooting — sustained in part by politicall­y active teenagers who survived the massacre — has shown no signs of dying out. Police say a former student killed 17 people with a legally purchased semiautoma­tic rifle, one of at least 10 guns he owned.

As calls for gun control have spread, the NRA has increasing­ly become a target of activists, with social media hashtags urging boycotts of any corporatio­n found to be linked with it.

Delta and United are the latest to submit to the pressure.

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