The Arizona Republic

Trump at CPAC:

The president argues that arming teachers would make schools “a much harder target.”

- David Jackson

“A teacher would’ve shot the hell out of him.” President Trump in speech Friday at conservati­ve gathering

WASHINGTON – President Trump argued before a group of political supporters Friday that arming some teachers will make the nation’s schools “a much harder target” for would-be attackers, offering a staunch defense of an idea opposed by law enforcemen­t and education groups.

“When we declare our schools to be gun-free zones, it just puts our students in far more danger,” Trump told the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference.

Minutes after slamming the Florida sheriff ’s deputy who failed to stop last week’s mass shooting in Parkland, Fla., as either a “coward” or someone who froze under extreme pressure, Trump insisted that teachers who actually know the students would do a better job defending them.

“A teacher would’ve shot the hell out of him,” Trump said of Nikolas Cruz, who authoritie­s said killed 17 people and wounded 15 others at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school.

Since holding an emotional listening session at the White House on Wednesday with students and parents affected by gun violence, Trump has called for “well-trained” and “gun-adept” teachers and coaches to be able to carry concealed firearms at schools.

The gun issue dominated a widerangin­g speech in which Trump announced new sanctions on nucleararm­ed North Korea, praised the late Rev. Billy Graham, extolled the tax cuts that passed last year, urged Republican­s to vote in this year’s congressio­nal elections and called for building a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border to keep out undocument­ed immigrants.

“Don’t worry, you’re getting the wall,” he told the Trump-friendly crowd at the annual CPAC meeting near Washington. Delegates whooped and chanted, “Build that wall! Build that wall!”

Law enforcemen­t and teachers groups said arming teachers would be ineffectiv­e and could lead to accidental shootings.

“We need solutions that will keep guns out of the hands of those who want to use them to massacre innocent children and educators,” said Lily Eskelsen García, president of the National Education Associatio­n. “Arming teachers does nothing to prevent that.”

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump follows the National Rifle Associatio­n playbook in advocating armed teachers. “Not surprised the NRA reeled President Trump back in,” Schumer said. “Just amazed at how fast it happened.”

During his calls to arm teachers, Trump praised students who survived last week’s shooting in Parkland. “Our whole nation was moved by their strength,” he said.

In recent days, Trump endorsed modest gun control measures, including expanding background checks and increasing the minimum age to buy semiautoma­tic weapons to 21 — but he did not expand on these ideas at CPAC, where delegates oppose gun control measures as infringeme­nts on Second Amendment rights.

Trump’s presentati­on drew catcalls from his critics.

“This speech at CPAC is demagogic, vapid, intellectu­ally dishonest and just plain old- fashioned idiotic,” GOP consultant Steve Schmidt tweeted. “If someone delivered this speech from the end of a bar most people would think that person was an imbecile.”

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE ?? President Trump spoke Friday at CPAC in National Harbor, Md.
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE President Trump spoke Friday at CPAC in National Harbor, Md.

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