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Mitt Romney Courts NRA As Gun Laws Come Under Scrutiny

Mitt Romney Nra

DAVID A. LIEB   04/12/12 10:52 PM ET  AP

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Running for the Senate in Massachusetts, Mitt Romney once assured voters in a state with strong gun-control laws: "I don't line up with the NRA." Now the likely Republican presidential nominee, Romney will headline the National Rifle Association's annual convention Friday and assure tens of thousands of gun-rights activists that he's squarely on their side.

Coming just days after rival Rick Santorum dropped out of the nomination race, the NRA convention in St. Louis provides Romney an opportunity to shore up his credentials with an important conservative constituency that badly wants to oust Democratic President Barack Obama.

Romney leads a list of prominent Republicans – including Santorum, Newt Gingrich, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker – who are scheduled to address more than 65,000 convention registrants during a session billed as a "celebration of American values." Although Obama has virtually ignored gun issues during his term, the NRA considers him a foe and plans to mount an aggressive effort against him.

The NRA has spent $20 million to $30 million in past presidential elections, said NRA spokesman Andrew Arulanandam. It hopes to exceed that amount this year in an effort that is likely to include mail, phone calls and TV, radio, Internet and newspaper ads, he said.

As the all-but-certain Republican presidential nominee, Romney hopes to reap the rewards of the NRA's broad network, which includes more than 4 million dues-paying members.

"Governor Romney is a strong supporter of Second Amendment rights," said campaign spokesman Ryan Williams, referring to gun rights. "He's always supported the Second Amendment and as president would continue to support the Second Amendment."

Yet Romney's alignment with the NRA also comes at a time when gun laws have been under national scrutiny.

The NRA was a main backer of Florida's "stand your ground" law, which gives people latitude to use deadly force rather than retreat from danger. That self-defense law has been much discussed in relation to the February shooting in which a neighborhood watch volunteer fatally shot an unarmed teenager. After authorities initially declined to charge him, George Zimmerman was charged Wednesday with second-degree murder in the death of Trayvon Martin. Zimmerman's attorney has said the defendant will plead not guilty and invoke the "stand your ground" law.

Romney has said little about whether he favors such laws, though he has called the shooting a "terrible tragedy" and has said it was appropriate for prosecutors to look into the case.

After the shooting, Obama said, "If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon." And while he said at the time that he supported the investigation, he didn't address the issue of guns.

In fact, Obama has hardly talked about the issue since a couple of months after the January 2011 assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz., when the president promised to develop new steps on gun safety.

Romney hasn't always been in the NRA's good graces.

It was as a challenger to Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy in 1994 that Romney professed not to line up with the group. When he was running for governor in 2002, the NRA shied away from making any endorsement and gave Romney's Democratic opponent a better rating on gun-rights issues.

Massachusetts quadrupled its gun-licensing fee while Romney was governor. He also signed a 2004 law that made permanent a ban on assault-type weapons, though it was coupled with measures backed by gun-rights groups, such as a lengthening of the firearm license period from four to six years and the creation of an appeals board for people seeking to restore their gun licenses.

As he was considering his first presidential run in 2006, Romney signed up for a lifetime membership in the National Rifle Association.

For Brian Dorsey – a central Missouri turkey farmer who declares "I'm all about gun-rights" – Romney's appearance at the NRA convention in St. Louis is an important element in assuring Dorsey's vote come November.

"It signals to me that he cares about gun owners and hunters," Dorsey said.

While some gun-control advocates might be turned off by Romney's association with the NRA, there's little likelihood such activists were going to vote for him anyway, leaving little political downside for Romney's appeals to NRA faithful, said Dave Robertson, a political science professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

"In these days of polarization, you want to make sure your partisans know that you're on their side and don't leave any doubt," Robertson said. He added: "In some ways, he's quite lucky this is occurring in April, where he can shore up the base at this point and he still has a number of months to reassure independent moderates that he has their interest at heart."

Retired state fisheries division director Steve Eder is one of those independents still trying to decide whether to support Obama or Romney. An avid outdoorsman, Eder owns a variety of guns but is not an NRA member and considers himself a moderate when it comes to gun-control issues.

"I don't see President Obama as being an outdoorsman, nor do I really see Mitt Romney as that type of person either," said Eder, 61, of Jefferson City.

To Eder, that doesn't really matter. The economy commands greater attention. In this election, gun-rights are "secondary to a lot of other issues," he said.

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Running for the Senate in Massachusetts, Mitt Romney once assured voters in a state with strong gun-control laws: "I don't line up with the NRA." Now the likely Republican ...
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Running for the Senate in Massachusetts, Mitt Romney once assured voters in a state with strong gun-control laws: "I don't line up with the NRA." Now the likely Republican ...
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01:49 PM on 04/17/2012
As a violence policy advocate, the steps needed to end gun violence are clear.
The First step is to take advantage of high profile incidents.
The Second step is to marginalize legal gun use and historic precedent.
The Third step is to make some guns seem more dangerous than others, even if they are not.
The Fourth step is to register every sale.
The Fifth step is a robust “Shall Issue” permitting process.
The Final step is to encourage and incentivize the forfeiture of arms.
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jephman
Sarcasm is the obstinate child of Absurd
12:51 PM on 04/13/2012
Two officers were killed in the line of duty yesterday, one was a police chief. If we can't keep guns from criminals because a paranoid group of gun enthusiasts, then maybe a law requiring all citizens to own at least one gun would level the playing field. If the Martin kid had a gun of his own he may very well be alive today or at least have a longer life while he waited in prison for his date with death.
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Abbey Normal
There is no darkness but ignorance.­
10:32 AM on 04/13/2012
Firearms sales are up almost 15% since 2010 and certain calibers of ammo are in extremely high demand, hence shortages. Just, what's the NRA's beef with another Obama admin again? Most extremely restrictive gun laws occur at the state level, just look at California and former Governor Romney's state pf Massachusetts.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allencollinsa
10:04 AM on 04/13/2012
OBAMA 2012' OBAMA 2012' WELCOME ALL OF YOU OBAMA REPUBLICANS THAT HAVE NO WHERE TO TURN! WELCOME AGAIN!!!!!!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allencollinsa
10:03 AM on 04/13/2012
romney wants to ban all hand guns, screw him.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Dimensio
I just don't know what went wrong!
08:52 AM on 04/13/2012
I am certain that a man who, as governor of a state, signed into law a permanent ban upon civilian ownership of popular and rarely criminally misused sporting rifles based upon arbitrary characteristics that do not enhance lethality and motivated entirely by irrational fear can be trusted as a supporter of civilian firearm ownership liberties.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
01:25 AM on 04/13/2012
More evidence of the raw power of the single issue gun lobby.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LouGots
09:42 PM on 04/15/2012
Behold the power, and tremble, you grabbers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
01:56 AM on 04/16/2012
Evidence of the ability to terrorize with handguns. Thanks!
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janmB
loves life
08:26 PM on 04/12/2012
A little research turned up THIS :
"In Massachusetts he bucked the National Rifle Association by supporting the Brady Bill and an assault-weapons ban, boasting, "I don't line up with the N.R.A." Lately what he brags about is that he joined the gun-rights organization as a life member — last August. Romney has been so eager to prove his Second Amendment bona fides that he boasted in New Hampshire, "I've been a hunter pretty much all my life." But then his campaign admitted he had actually hunted only twice, once as a teenager and then last year, on a trip with G.O.P. donors. That was followed by still more clarification: Romney insisted he has hunted small animals for many years, though he does not actually own a firearm. "Leave it to Mitt Romney to shoot himself in the foot with a gun he doesn't own," wrote Boston Globe columnist Joan Vennochi.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lee S
Watcher of all
08:23 PM on 04/12/2012
So is he for or against guns this time? He changes sides on issues so much I lose track!
pssdov
No act of kindness goes unnoticed
07:12 PM on 04/12/2012
I would love to see video of Mitt trying to go hunting. He would have his "second" shoot for him, while he posed with "his kill" afterwards. Poppa Hemingway or Teddy Roosevelt he ain't.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dawlishgal
06:28 PM on 04/12/2012
The Etch-a-sketch is getting a lot of use these days.
06:51 PM on 04/12/2012
yep
06:12 PM on 04/12/2012
And Mitt Romney...if we woke up tomorrow in an alternate universe where guns were not so popular, he would be on the band wagon to take every gun off the street. After all, "(he) is just trying to get to the White House" and "corporations are people too, my friend"
This country is in deep trouble if Mitt gets to Pennsylvania Ave. I've always appreciated the saying, "when you don't stand for anything you'll fall for everything" What does Nitt stand for? HIS career advancement!!
06:04 PM on 04/12/2012
GOD AND GUNS...this is a bumper sticker. Does anyone else see the irony in this? If God came down the first thing he would do, i believe, is destroy every gun. why would He allow anything that killed His creation?
and if Zimmerman doesn't go to prison... he lost his defense credibility when he defied the 911 operator and continued to follow Trayvon. He needs to pay for his crime, not second degree anything. If this moron had stayed in his house watching tv or whatever he does at home, no crime would have been committed. I don't understand the questioning of the facts, ZIMMERMAN IS GUILTY!!!!
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LouGots
09:46 PM on 04/15/2012
God might do that.

On the other hand, He might tell anyone without a gun to sell his coat and buy one.
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silkphoenix
To Boldly Go Where No Man Has Gone Before
05:45 PM on 04/12/2012
We don't call him the "flip-flop" king for no reason.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susanbsbi
Slave to 3 cats
05:37 PM on 04/12/2012
Romney best step back and review all the tapes and print from the last time he tried become president. They are great for President Obama, but not for Romney, even the ones from earlier this year are biting him in the backside
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dawlishgal
06:31 PM on 04/12/2012
Conservatives may claim to not like "flip-flops" (even though they invented the term for this non-footwear use), but they don't mind when candidates flip-flop in their direction. In fact, they love it. Unless the candidate flip-flops back after winning the election.