Los Angeles Times

NRA stance lands airline in quagmire

Delta finds political middle ground elusive after its decision to end discounts.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com

It’s getting harder and harder to find neutral territory in America’s raging gun control debate. Just ask FedEx and Delta Air Lines, companies that — you’d think — don’t have anything to do with firearms.

Over the last two weeks, both have been under pressure to take a position on guns by two of the most powerful forces in U.S. politics right now: the National Rifle Assn. and the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The story starts — as many gun control stories now do — with the students.

After a gunman killed 17 people on Feb. 14 at their Parkland, Fla., school, the students turned their youthful energies toward reinvigora­ting the nation’s gun control movement, which has long been powered by outraged survivors and victims’ family members.

The students have rallied widespread support among left-leaning Americans, and they have used their social media skills to unleash a public backlash that seeks to marginaliz­e and isolate the NRA, which says it has more than 5 million members.

Feeling a political wind growing at the students’ backs — and adopting tactics from recent social media campaigns — gun control advocates began pressuring prominent corporatio­ns to drop their discount deals for NRA members.

In a sign of how much the NRA has been put on the defensive, many of those companies cut ties.

FedEx tried to find a middle ground. The publicly traded shipping company issued a statement saying it supported an assault weapons ban and background checks for gun purchases, adding, “FedEx views assault rifles and large capacity magazines as an inherent danger to schools, workplaces and communitie­s when such weapons are misused.”

But the company also said it would not drop NRA members’ discounted shipping rates, implying that the company might violate federal law by doing so.

Despite ostensibly dealing a blow to the NRA in calling for gun control, the company’s decision to defend its NRA discount drew blowback from gun control supporters. They have threatened a boycott against FedEx and other companies that have not dropped their relationsh­ips with the NRA.

On Saturday, Delta took a different path, notifying the NRA that the airline was dropping its contract for discounted fares for members traveling to the group’s 2018 annual meeting in Dallas.

The company was not throwing in its lot with the student activists, exactly. Facing growing public pressure, it was trying to extricate itself from a deteriorat­ing situation as rapidly as possible.

“Delta’s decision reflects the airline’s neutral status in the current national debate over gun control amid recent school shootings,” the company said in a statement. “Out of respect for our customers and employees on both sides, Delta has taken this action to refrain from entering this debate and focus on its business.”

To make the point clear, Delta officials added: “Delta continues to support the 2nd Amendment.” (That’s not your average corporate declaratio­n. Imagine if Holiday Inn issued a statement affirming it supports the 6th Amendment right to a speedy trial; if you have to say it, you’re probably in trouble.)

To gun control supporters, it was good enough. “To all companies who severed ties with the NRA, those personally affected by their influence on legislatio­n thank you,” tweeted Emma Gonzalez, one of the most prominent Stoneman Douglas student activists.

But gun rights supporters were outraged, seeing the students’ campaign as an unjust attack on lawful gun owners.

“So @Delta, you REALLY want 5 million #NRA members like me, who have NEVER committed a mass shooting, to f ly on your competitio­n? Done,” tweeted one member, Jessie Jane Duff, earning more than 4,000 retweets. “Who ever thought this was a great PR campaign idea should be fired.”

This has been a common response for conservati­ves on the losing side of pressure campaigns in the past, but they have sometimes lacked the muscle that liberal activists have mustered to influence corporate boycotts.

Except Delta has a weak spot: tax breaks.

Headquarte­red in Atlanta, Delta has been trying to persuade Georgia’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to pass a tax break on sales tax for jet fuel worth tens of millions of dollars.

So when Delta ended its discount for NRA members, that didn’t sit well with Georgia Republican­s.

“If Delta is so flush that they don’t need NRA members’ hard-earned dollars, they can certainly do without the $40 million tax break they are asking GA taxpayers for,” tweeted former Republican state Sen. Rick Jeffares, who is now running for lieutenant governor.

Then, on Monday, Georgia’s current Republican lieutenant governor, Casey Cagle, who is also the president of the state Senate, threw down the gauntlet.

“I will kill any tax legislatio­n that benefits @Delta unless the company changes its position and fully reinstates its relationsh­ip with @NRA,” tweeted Cagle, who recently boasted of having an “A+” rating from the NRA and of having endorsemen­ts from the gun organizati­on. “Corporatio­ns cannot attack conservati­ves and expect us not to fight back.”

Soon after, the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that Georgia’s Senate had in effect blocked the tax bill.

Cagle’s office did not respond to a request for comment, but the NRA, tweeting the news, added a fist-bump emoji and the hashtags “#StandandFi­ght” and “#SorryNotSo­rry.”

Delta — now being pressured to reinstate its relationsh­ip with the NRA, or lose out on tens of millions of dollars in breaks from Georgia taxpayers — did not respond to a request for comment.

Cagle’s decision to use his public office to pressure a private company over a political issue raised some concerns among legal observers.

“It is hard to evaluate at this stage, but for the state to penalize Delta for its political stance would be very problemati­c under the 1st Amendment,” UC Berkeley law school dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y wrote.

But UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh thought Cagle had not oversteppe­d his bounds.

But of course, in this political environmen­t, every action creates a reaction, which creates a reaction, which creates a reaction.

“@Delta, as one of your most frequent flyers, know that the NY LG admires your principled stance,” tweeted Kathy Hochul, New York’s Democratic lieutenant governor. “Let’s continue our great relationsh­ip. NY is open for business & ♥’s Delta — move HQ to where you’re appreciate­d?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States