National Rifle Association
Suffers Self-Proclaimed �Biggest Election Disaster in Nearly 15 Years�
Gun Lobby Sees
Shift in Control of U.S. House as Devastating to its Agenda
NRA-Endorsed Candidates Lose in Key Senate Races
Washington, DC--In
the wake of the Republican party losing control of the U.S. House and
amidst key Senate losses, the National Rifle Association (NRA) has suffered
its �biggest election disaster in nearly 15 years� according to the NRA�s
own election materials. In its magazines and in member communications
leading up to the 2006 midterm elections, the NRA repeatedly warned that
its �pro-Second Amendment House of Representatives� was at stake. And
in a direct-mail appeal sent out in July 2006, the NRA�s Political Victory
Fund declared that �you and I could be headed for our biggest election
disaster in nearly 15 years� if Democrats were to take control of one
or both Houses of Congress.
In the wake of the
NRA�s electoral defeat, Violence Policy Center Legislative Director Kristen
Rand states, �The gun lobby�s foot soldiers went AWOL in this election.�
The November 2006
pre-election �Choose or Lose�
edition of the NRA�s �America�s 1st Freedom� magazine admonished members
that, �Our recent victories and future legislative objectives are at risk
this Election Day if gun owners don�t rally and go to the polls to support
the true friends of the Second Amendment.� The magazine amounted to little
more than a 64-page attack on Democrats, with a particular focus on House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee head Charles Schumer (D-NY). In the publication, NRA President
Sandra S. Froman warned, "We are at war. Our freedom is at stake. The
Second Amendment is America's original homeland security and you, my fellow
NRA members, are at the heart of our national defense. But Pelosi and
her fellow extremists, who are hoping to take control, oppose our national
security efforts and oppose your Right to Keep and Bear Arms....Those
who would seize power on Nov. 7 are unrelenting opponents of your values
and beliefs...."
The gun lobby�s allegiance
to Republicans shows in its political giving. In 2006, the NRA�s PAC gave
85 percent of its campaign contributions to Republican candidates while
Gun Owners of America gave 100 percent to Republicans. In addition, Republican
activists Grover Norquist, David Keene, and Ollie North serve on the NRA�s
board of directors in addition to current and former Republican Members
of Congress.
Just one week before
the November 7th election, NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre
summed up the urgency of the situation in an �exclusive� interview with
the pro-gun publication �The New Gun Week.� Warned LaPierre, �Gunowners
need to get to the polls because the battle lines are drawn....[W]e need
to erect a barricade to protect the Second Amendment from the handgun
control crowd....They want to unleash the ATF [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives] on every law-abiding gunowner in America.�
In addition to the
House turnover, NRA-backed Senate candidates also lost in key races including
Rick Santorum (R-PA), Jim Talent (R-MO), Mike Bouchard (R-MI), and Michael
Steele (R-MD). In the two Senate races still too close to call, the NRA
backed Republicans George Allen in Virginia and Conrad Burns in Montana.
The Violence Policy Center is a
national non-profit educational foundation that conducts research on violence
in America and works to develop violence-reduction policies and proposals.
The Center examines the role of firearms in America, conducts research
on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease firearm-related
death and injury.
|
 |
For Release:
Wednesday, November 8, 2006
Contact:
Kristen Rand
Violence Policy Center
(202) 822-8200 x102
|
|