Orlando Sentinel

Scott won’t go to NRA convention this year

Group suing over his approval of gun control laws after Parkland

- By Gray Rohrer

TALLAHASSE­E — Gov. Rick Scott, who is being sued for signing a bill imposing new gun controls, won’t be attending the National Rifle Associatio­n convention, which starts today, an aide for his U.S. Senate campaign confirmed Thursday.

Scott, now a candidate for the U.S. Senate against incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson, attended the NRA’s annual meeting in Atlanta last year as a featured speaker. He was advertised as a speaker again this year by the NRA for its convention in Dallas this weekend.

Then came the mass shooting in Parkland, resulting in 17 students and faculty dead.

In the immediate aftermath of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, Scott’s image was removed from the NRA’s website promoting the convention. At the time, though, Scott aides didn’t say whether the governor would accept an invitation from the group.

The NRA is suing Scott for signing the bill that imposes restrictio­ns on gun purchases. The new law, passed in response to the Parkland massacre, bans bump stocks, increases the minimum age to buy a rifle from 18 to 21 and places a three-day waiting period on all firearm sales.

The governor’s new position on gun laws is a substantiv­e shift from last year, when he spoke at the NRA gathering. “We [Republican­s] need a larger majority in the U.S. Senate. We need a majority that has the intellectu­al capacity to comprehend these three words in the Constituti­on: shall not infringe. What does shall not infringe on the people’s right to bear arms mean? It means shall not infringe. It’s really not very complicate­d,” Scott said.

Democrats aren’t convinced of Scott’s breach with the NRA, and note that he still embraced the group last year, nearly a year after the massacre at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando that left 53 dead.

“Rick Scott didn’t have the courage to stand up to the gun lobby for seven years and now he's trying to hide his record of putting himself and the gun lobby over the interests and safety of Floridians,’’ said Sebastian Kitchen, Florida Democratic Party spokesman, in a released statement. “In the 612 days between Pulse and Parkland, Rick Scott did nothing to address gun violence but used the 2017 NRA convention to essentiall­y announce his U.S. Senate campaign, proving he has no interest in keeping our communitie­s safe from gun violence.”

Until the Parkland shooting, the governor had an A rating from the NRA. He’s signed a series of NRAbacked bills during his two terms as governor that ease access to guns or reduce penalties on gun owners.

Scott approved bills to expedite concealed carry license applicatio­ns, reduce license fees and prohibit insurance companies from taking gun ownership into account when writing policies. Another law that sought to ban doc-

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