Donald Trump, who was buoyed as a candidate by $30 million from the gun lobby, will become the first president in more than three decades to address the annual convention of the National Rifle Association.
The NRA, which is hosting its annual convention this week in Atlanta, spent big to get Trump and other Republicans elected. The group dropped almost $53 million on outside spending during the 2016 cycle -- $37 million opposing Democrats and $16 million favoring Republicans, according to OpenSecrets data. The group also contributed more than $1 million directly to GOP candidates, parties, and leadership PACs.
The NRA was an early endorser of Trump’s candidacy, announcing its support at last year’s convention. Its support has led to access. Trump met with NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre at the White House during the first two weeks of his presidency as part of a Supreme Court strategy meeting with conservative groups. Getting a conservative justice onto the high court has been a priority for the group.
The association has been one of the most high-profile lobbying organizations on Capitol Hill, spending more than $24 millionsince 2008 to influence lawmakers and government officials, with $5.9 million spent during the most recent election cycle. The group reported spending $2.2 million on lobbying in the first quarter of 2017 -- about $1 million more than it has spent on lobbying in a single quarter since 2008. The NRA is currently pressing for reciprocal concealed-carry laws, which would allow people with licenses from states that have relaxed gun laws to carry hidden weapons in states with stricter gun laws. It’s also urging Congress to pass legislation that would relax restrictions on silencers, claiming they would be used to reduce hearing damage.
Trump signed NRA-supported legislation in late February, rolling back Obama-era restrictions on gun ownership among the mentally ill. The legislation, a Congressional Review Act (CRA) measure that passed largely along party lines, overturns a Social Security Administration rule that would have required the agency to share information about beneficiaries who are unable to manage their own finances with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), the federal background check system for gun purchases.
Senators who voted for the measure have received an average of $39,000 from the pro-gun industry since 2010 -- 145 times as much as senators who voted against the legislation. House members who voted for the bill have received an average of $20,000 from the pro-gun industry since 2010 -- 113 times as much as members who voted against the bill.
The top five Senate recipients of money from the pro-gun industry since 2010 -- Ron Johnson, R-Wisc. ($117,464); Marco Rubio, R-Fla. ($113,915); Rand Paul, R-Ky. ($113,716); Ted Cruz, R-Texas ($105,164); and John Cornyn, R-Texas ($91,075) -- all voted for the legislation.
Other scheduled speakers at the NRA’s three-day Atlanta convention include Cruz, Florida Governor Rick Scott and Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke.
You may view this press release in its original on the MapLight website here.