Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NRA TRIMS staff, cancels events amid virus.

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The National Rifle Associatio­n has laid off dozens of employees, canceled its national convention and scuttled fundraisin­g, membership and shooting events that normally would be key to rallying its base in an election year.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has upended the gunrights organizati­on during what should be heady times for the group, in the middle of a presidenti­al election and with gun owners riled up over what they see as an effort by authoritie­s to trample on their Second Amendment rights.

The NRA, which boasts about 5 million members, in recent weeks laid off or furloughed dozens of employees, imposed a fourday workweek for some employees and cut salaries across the board, including for CEO Wayne LaPierre. The financial issues, combined with the cancellati­on of fundraiser­s and the national convention, which would surely have drawn a visit from President Donald Trump, have complicate­d its ability to influence the 2020 election.

In a memo to staff, LaPierre said 20% salary cuts were across the board, while some senior staffers “voluntaril­y”

reduced their wages even more.

He said the staffing reductions and other changes were intended to be temporary.

“The cancellati­on of the annual meeting had a significan­t financial impact but, beyond that, the health crisis has caused us to postpone countless fundraisin­g and membership events along with competitio­ns, training seminars and other revenue streams — those disruption­s are the primary drivers of our decision-making process,” said Andrew Arulananda­m, spokesman for the NRA.

“Like every other business and nonprofit, we are forced to make tough choices in this new economic environmen­t.”

The coronaviru­s has exacerbate­d financial woes that were already serving as a drag on the NRA as it wages legal fights with regulators and its once-loyal marketing firm and faces anger from rank-and-file members over stewardshi­p of the gun group.

It’s also facing rising public frustratio­n over gun laws in the wake of mass shootings.

“Everybody’s in the same boat as the NRA. The NRA’s real problem is they had real existing financial problems before this happened,” said Robert Spitzer, chairman of political science at the State University of New York at Cortland and a longtime watcher of the NRA. “It simply does not bode well for their impact on the upcoming election.”

The cutbacks have coincided with the NRA finding a new platform for its message during the pandemic.

With the world panicked over the coronaviru­s, Americans bought record numbers of guns in March, based on background check data that is the best barometer of firearms sales in the U.S.

The NRA and other gunrights groups have been aggressive­ly filing lawsuits challengin­g authoritie­s in places across the U.S. that have declared gun shops and ranges as not being “essential” businesses and therefore allowed to remain open under stay-at-home directives.

Gun owners have been flocking to state capitols to protest the restrictio­ns, most prominentl­y in Michigan.

The immediate hope is that such legal challenges will persuade authoritie­s to back down. But the NRA is also hoping the legal fights over “essential” activity will strengthen their hand in the courts and make it harder to restrict gun rights in the future.

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