The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NRA backs Cagle, citing his move to kill Delta tax break

New leader North says GOP candidate didn’t ‘back down.’

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle earned the NRA’s endorsemen­t after he followed through on his vow to “kill” a tax break for Delta Air Lines. And the Second Amendment rights group rewarded him Saturday for that headline-grabbing move. National Rifle Associatio­n President-elect Oliver North stumped with Cagle at three events around the state, saying it backed him over Secretary of State Brian Kemp in the July 24 runoff because Cagle had an “airtight record” on firearms issues that led lawmakers to rebuke the Atlanta-based airline. “He stood with the NRA when we were under attack by the far left. And thanks to Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, one of those corporatio­ns paid $40 million for it,” North said at a rally at the Governors Gun Club in Kennesaw. “Casey, you don’t back down. You never back down.” He’s referring to Cagle’s decision to orchestrat­e the demise of a jet-fuel tax exemption that would have saved Delta $40 million a year. The airline, the state’s largest private employer, enraged conservati­ves by cutting business ties with the gun rights group. Cagle’s move also led to an outcry from Democrats and business leaders who worried that snubbing the state’s largest employer would tarnish Georgia’s pro-business brand and jeopardize the hunt for Amazon’s second headquarte­rs. Some executives quickly donated to Democratic campaigns. For Cagle, though, the Delta snub has also helped him leverage support with conservati­ves in the long GOP nomination contest that ends next week. Carolyn Meadows, the NRA’s interim president, said the group’s members won’t forget his stance. “When a certain airline tried to bully those of us who are NRA members, he stepped up to the plate and said, ‘That’s not going to happen,’” she said. The rally attracted hundreds of supporters at the sprawling Kennesaw facility, which bills itself as the largest indoor gun club in the nation. It was the second of two events that also brought North to Savannah and Gainesvill­e. And Cagle, for his part, roared to the crowd how he was “tired of conservati­ves getting kicked around.” “Are we never going to back down, or what?” he said, to whoops of applause. “The NRA doesn’t back down, and Casey Cagle as your next governor isn’t going to either.” Cagle and Kemp, who sports an endorsemen­t from the GeorgiaCar­ry.org state gun rights organizati­on, have increasing­ly competed over who is the most vocal supporter of the Second Amendment as they scrap for support for conservati­ves who will decide the GOP nominee. Kemp aired an ad showing him pointing a shotgun toward a young man purporting to be his daughter’s suitor, and he has also called for a sales tax holiday for guns and ammunition over the July Fourth holiday. Cagle sent backers a lengthy dispatch assuring them he supports “constituti­onal carry” — which would let gun owners conceal and carry handguns without a permit — and has run his own TV spot featuring a shotgun-toting man berating a Kemp lookalike. And both have rushed to the defense of Gainesvill­e-based gunmaker Honor Defense after it claimed financial services firms disrupted some of its credit card payments. The two vowed to take executive action to prevent other gun manufactur­ers from facing similar treatment. The victor will face Democrat Stacey Abrams, who has taken the opposite approach: She is defying decades of convention­al party strategy by opposing the NRA and calling for new firearms limits.

 ?? JASON GETZ /SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? National Rifle Associatio­n Presidente­lect Oliver North (right) speaks Saturday at the Governors Gun Club in Kennesaw to tout the campaign of Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, seen at left with his wife, Nita.
JASON GETZ /SPECIAL TO THE AJC National Rifle Associatio­n Presidente­lect Oliver North (right) speaks Saturday at the Governors Gun Club in Kennesaw to tout the campaign of Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, seen at left with his wife, Nita.

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