'It's straight out of a playbook': At NRA
convention, conspiracy theories abound
To many attendees, the mass shooting in Uvalde was
about mental illness and dark forces pushing their own agendas.
By DAVID
SIDERS
05/27/2022
09:23 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/05/27/nra-convention-uvalde-shooting-00035842
HOUSTON —
The protesters who raised their middle fingers and shouted “shame” outside the
National Rifle Association’s big gathering here on Friday had assumed — like
much of official Washington — that the timing of a school shooting three days
earlier might somehow be problematic for the NRA.
For gun
enthusiasts and the Republican politicians courting them, it was only more
reason to come.
Here, amid
acres of guns and tactical gear inside a cavernous convention hall, the
proximate cause of the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, was not a rifle, but
mental illness, shadowy forces of evil or, as one man in a “Let’s Go Brandon”
T-shirt put it, the “destruction of our children” by the teachings of the left.
In Uvalde,
a makeshift memorial of white wooden crosses had gone up for the 19 children
and two adults slain. But at the NRA meeting in Houston, less than 300 miles
away, the shooting had been reduced to a sling stone in the broader culture
wars. The slaughter, it was universally agreed, was a tragedy. But gun owners
saw themselves as set upon, too.
The Second
Amendment, former President Donald Trump said, was “totally under siege.” Sen.
Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, said the “real goal” of many politicians on the
left “is disarming America.” Kristi Noem, the Republican governor of South
Dakota who, like Cruz, may run for president in 2024, warned, “Now is not the
time to cave to the woke culture.”
“It’s not a
gun control problem. It’s a demon control problem,” said Joe Chambers, who had
traveled to the conference from Porter, Texas.
Protesters
gather outside of the NRA's annual meeting in Houston.
People
gather outside the George R. Brown Convention Center to protest the National
Rifle Association's annual meeting in Houston. | Jae C. Hong/AP Photo
His wife,
Ana, gestured to the TV cameras and demonstrators outside: “This is all
propaganda,” she said. “They’ll use anything to make us look bad.”
On Friday,
as the NRA opened its Memorial Day weekend conference, Trump said that if he
runs for president again in 2024 and wins, he will adopt a more militaristic
approach to public safety, pledging to “crack down on violent crime like never
before.”
But beyond
that, the reaction by Republicans and the gun lobby to Uvalde followed
traditional lines. They called for more spending on school security measures
and mental health, while pointing to gun violence in heavily populated, liberal
cities. In interview after interview, conference-goers volunteered the federal
government’s $40 billion aid package to Ukraine as evidence that the government
could afford to spend money hardening schools.
Some,
including at least one gun seller, said they could support enacting additional,
though limited, gun restrictions. But they were no more prevalent than the
conference attendees who were entertaining conspiracy theories, uncertain
whether the left was setting them up.
“Why did it
happen three days ago?” asked Jim Hollis, a lifetime NRA benefactor from St.
Louis. “I’m not sure that there are not forces someplace that somehow find
troubled people and nurture and develop them and push them for their own
agendas.”
Hollis, who
asserted the shooter in Uvalde “could have walked in there with a baseball bat
and possibly killed as many kids,” feared the “the attack on gun rights” was
“strengthening” after Uvalde.
“There are
people who thought they could use this Uvalde situation to dampen this
[meeting],” he said.
Said
another man, who declined to give his name, at the conference: “It’s straight
out of a playbook.”
People walk
through the main exhibition hall at the National Rifle Association Annual
Meeting.
Visitors
mill about the booths in the main exhibition hall at the National Rifle
Association Annual Meeting at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston.
| Michael Wyke/AP Photo
The NRA
meeting was not unaffected by the shooting. Several musicians who had planned
to perform at the event — and whose audiences are broader than a GOP primary
electorate — did cancel on the NRA. Larry Gatlin, of the Gatlin Brothers, told
CNN he “didn’t think it was a good time to go down to Houston and have a
party.”
Texas GOP
Gov. Greg Abbott, who had been scheduled to speak at the conference, elected to
return to Uvalde instead, though he recorded a video message for the NRA.
Daniel Defense, the company that made the gun used in Uvalde — and which posted
an image on social media of a small child holding a gun prior to the mass
shooting — pulled out.
But there’s
a reason that Trump, Cruz and Noem, among others, were all on hand.
“If you’re
a politician with a long-term vision, these are opportunities to stand up for
the Second Amendment when it’s not easy to do, which could prove useful for a
politician, perhaps not in today’s news cycle, but down the road,” said John
Thomas, a Republican strategist works on House campaigns across the country.
He said he
could envision cutting an ad featuring a Republican’s remarks at the
conference: “When times were tough, and the weaker RINOs and liberals wanted to
take your guns, you know, such and such stood up for your right to protect
yourself and your family.”
It’s that
political incentive that explains why, for many Republicans, attendance at the
NRA convention was not problematic at all — and also why passage of gun
restrictions remains so unlikely. Nationally — and even in heavily Republican
Texas — public polling reflects broad support for stricter gun measures. But in
recent years, Texas lawmakers have loosened gun laws, not made them more
restrictive.
“You can
look at the public opinion data and see, yes, there are Republicans who will
support things like background checks and ‘red flag laws,’” said James Henson,
director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin,
which has polled regularly on the issue. “But the political debate appeals to
other impulses that are also evident in public opinion that suggest it is very
easy to present Republican voters with slippery slope-type arguments that hinge
on negative partisanship and switch the frame of the debate.”
Henson
said, “So the debate isn’t about are there reasonable compromises here that
might reduce the possibility of events like this,” but rather the GOP’s
capitalization on a politically salient message that “Democrats want to take
away your guns and are fundamentally against the Constitution and are enemies
of Second Amendment rights and therefore rights in general.”
That’s
precisely the case that Trump made on Friday, when he derided calls for
stricter gun measures as a first step to “total gun confiscation.”
After he
finished speaking, as conference-goers left the hall, they were met on the
sidewalk by demonstrators who demanded to know if there were any additional gun
restrictions they could agree to.
For the
most part, the answer was “No.”
“These
people, year after year, tragedy after tragedy, it’s the same damn thing over
and over again,” said Roland Gutierrez, a Democratic state senator whose district
includes Uvalde. “I sometimes think these guys just double down on their
madness … rallying up their base of constituents that believe that even
mentioning guns is infringing on their Second Amendment rights.”
“It’s
mental health and the devil,” he said, in reference to the explanations of gun
rights supporters. “And it’s unacceptable … It’s unconscionable.”
Nancy Vu
contributed to this report.
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