USA TODAY US Edition

NRA, Trump have same pitch of fear, greed

- Chris Brennan Follow USA TODAY elections columnist Chris Brennan on X, formerly known as Twitter: @ByChrisBre­nnan

HARRISBURG, Pa. – Donald Trump on Friday acknowledg­ed his cowardice when it comes to America’s epidemic of gun violence and the resulting slaughter of this country’s children.

Being Trump, he tried to make that sound like a virtue.

Speaking at a National Rifle Associatio­n gun show in Pennsylvan­ia’s capital city Friday, Trump bragged about his record of inaction.

“During my four years nothing happened,” Trump said. “And there was great pressure on me, having to do with guns. We did nothing. We didn’t yield.”

That’s Trump telling the truth for a change.

Here’s what did happen. From Jan. 20, 2017, to Jan. 19, 2021 – Trump’s time as president – the country saw 1,714 mass shootings in which four or more people were killed or wounded, with 1,679 deaths and 7,355 injuries, Everytown for Gun Safety, a nonprofit that advocates for solutions to stop gun violence, told me.

Trump didn’t mention that in his NRA speech. He also skipped the context, of course, of the moment six years ago when he suggested making changes to gun laws that the NRA didn’t want while accusing other Republican­s of being too afraid to do it before eventually backing down.

Trump and NRA profit off our divided country

Trump can’t stand up to the NRA because they’re too alike. They sell the same product – division. They turn your fear into their money.

Trump uses that money to seek power and avoid responsibi­lity, funneling campaign contributi­ons to lawyers in his criminal and civil cases.

The NRA uses that money to live large – private jets, luxury vacations, bespoke wardrobes – all while masqueradi­ng as a defender of good-old plainspoke­n American folk.

Its leaders have long since made up from the momentary disagreeme­nt during Trump’s one term as president.

To be clear: The NRA doesn’t serve the crowd assembled Friday at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex to hear Trump. It is a lobbying arm of this country’s gun manufactur­ers.

The NRA doesn’t just want you to buy a gun. It wants you to buy as many guns as you can. And just like with Trump, division is its best marketing tactic.

The NRA’s constant clamor is Democrats want to seize guns from everyone. Its pitch is always about “the good guy with a gun” standing up in a shootout with a “bad guy with a gun.”

Guess what the good guy and the bad guy have in common – they both are armed with guns manufactur­ed by companies that the NRA values more than your life.

What Trump did six years ago after Florida school massacre

Wednesday marks six years since a massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where a 19-year-old used a semiautoma­tic rifle to murder 14 students and three staff members.

Trump hosted a White House meeting on gun reform two weeks after that, where he accused Republican­s in a bipartisan group of legislator­s of avoiding some firearm issues “because you’re afraid of the NRA.”

On the table in that meeting, Trump openly considered raising the age requiremen­t from 18 to 21 to purchase an assault rifle and making it easier to seize guns from people considered a danger to themselves or others.

But he also supported an NRAbacked plan to arm teachers in schools.

Who’s afraid of the NRA?

NRA has spent millions on Trump’s presidenti­al campaigns

That’s all Trump. And why? The NRA spent more than $31 million to help Trump defeat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

In 2020, as the NRA was splinterin­g with an internal conflict about lavish spending by its leaders, the group still spent more than $16 million in Trump’s losing battle against Joe Biden.

This has never been about guns, for Trump or the NRA. It’s about money.

Wayne LaPierre, the NRA leader who resigned last month, acknowledg­ed in testimony during a civil trial that he spent the group’s money and accepted gifts from vendors to live a lifestyle of private flights, luxury vacations and tailored suits.

He’s gone, but the gun grift goes on. Trump’s speech Friday was the closing event for the NRA’s Great American Outdoor Show. A ticket to hear Trump cost $15 or came free with a new membership with the group, which ranges from $45 for one year or $1,500 for a lifetime membership.

Charles Cotton, the NRA president, introduced Trump, saying the group had “no greater friend” than the former president.

Trump now tells us to ‘get over’ it

The crowd, many wearing attire emblazoned with Trump’s “Make America Great Again” motto, welcomed him enthusiast­ically when he took the stage.

But Trump soon turned lethargic, sounding weary, and the crowd matched his energy as he rattled off a rolling repetition of his usual grievances about immigratio­n and crime and the economy.

He twice predicted a “100% chance” of a major terrorist attack in the near future and the advent of World War III if he is not elected president again.

“An entire generation of young people could very well be decimated by something that could very well happen,” Trump said of that imagined war.

He didn’t dare touch on the generation­s that have seen classmates murdered and wounded at school. Trump rarely seems to learn from his mistakes, but crossing the NRA is not a misstep he will repeat.

The man who wants to be America’s president again has a new approach to the slaughter of children in classrooms – “get over it.”

Campaignin­g last month ahead of the Iowa caucuses, Trump addressed a recent school shooting that left an 11year-old boy and his principal dead and six wounded before the 17-year-old gunman killed himself.

“It’s just horrible, so surprising to see it here,” Trump said while campaignin­g for an office where, by his own account, he did nothing to stop this sort of thing. “But we have to get over it, we have to move forward.”

School shootings are sadly no longer surprising. Neither is Trump’s shrug at the slaughter and eagerness to move ahead and cash in with the NRA without doing anything to stop it.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Supporters of former President Donald Trump wait to hear him speak at an NRA forum on Friday in Harrisburg, Pa.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES Supporters of former President Donald Trump wait to hear him speak at an NRA forum on Friday in Harrisburg, Pa.
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