President Donald Trump, who briefly pledged to "fight" the National
Rifle Association after a February mass shooting at a Florida high
school, is expected to throw his full weight behind the powerful gun
rights group on Friday at an event in Dallas.
In addressing
the gun lobbying group's annual convention, the Republican president
will emphasize his support for gun rights in political terms, likely
claiming again that Democrats want to take away Americans' firearms, a
White House official said.
This will be Trump's fourth speech to
the powerful NRA and, with control of the U.S. Congress up for grabs in
November's midterm elections and campaigns under way, it is expected to
include familiar warnings meant to excite the Republican voter base.
"These
things typically are pretty 'rah, rah Second Amendment' types of
addresses," the official said, adding that Trump likely will say that
Democrats oppose the constitutional amendment that protects gun
ownership.
The massacre that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Feb. 14 seemed to mark a
turning point in America's long-running gun debate, sparking a youth-led
movement for tighter gun controls.
Days after the shooting, Trump
promised action on gun regulation and at a gathering of state
officials, said this of the NRA: "We have to fight them every once in a
while."
Since then, no major new federal gun controls have been
imposed, although the administration is pursuing a proposed regulatory
ban on bump stocks of the sort used in an October 2017 mass shooting in
Las Vegas that killed 59 people.
A bump stock allows a
semi-automatic rifle to fire like an automatic one. Semi-automatic
assault rifles are sold widely in the United States, which has the
world's highest per capita gun ownership rates. The NRA has fiercely
defended America's gun ownership rights for many years, citing the
Second Amendment.
RHETORICAL SHIFT
Since
Parkland, Trump has largely moved his rhetoric back in line with the
NRA, which endorsed him in his 2016 presidential election campaign and
gave him its financial backing.
The group's convention in Texas
will attract a strongly pro-Trump crowd, officials said, giving the
president room to take some swipes at his opponents, review his record
in office and complain about Special Counsel Robert Mueller's
investigation of possible collusion between Trump's 2016 campaign and
Russia.
The event was likely to be "reminiscent of rallies past," a second White House official said.
A
Reuters/Ipsos poll found in March 2018 that 54 percent of adults wanted
“strong regulations or restrictions” for firearms. That was up from 39
percent in a similar poll from April 2012.
Among Republicans in
the poll, 40 percent wanted strong regulations or restrictions in March
2018, up from 22 percent in April 2012.
Trump met with NRA
officials privately at the White House twice in February as he mulled
policy responses to the shooting. He eventually endorsed an NRA proposal
to arm teachers, a step the group said would help prevent mass school
shootings. Gun control activists generally oppose that idea.
Trump
initially expressed enthusiasm for measures to close loopholes for gun
buyers seeking to avoid the background check system, raise the age limit
for buying rifles, and find ways to seize guns temporarily from people
reported to be dangerous.
He has since endorsed more modest
proposals, such as legislation aimed at providing more data for the
background check system. He did not endorse closing a loophole in
existing law that would require background checks for guns bought at
guns shows or sales arranged over the internet.
Source: MSN
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