by Eleanor Williams-Brown
Americans own 35-50% of all civilian guns in the world. Even more worryingly, 3% of Americans own half of the civilian guns in the US and the top 3% of guns owners have more than 25 guns each. The National Rifle Association for America, (NRA), is the most prominent group who lobbies for Americans’ right to own guns, and challenges any gun control legislation. It is the main scapegoat for the continual failure of gun legislation, which considering its enormous influence on Washington, is justified.
Americans own 35-50% of all civilian guns in the world. Even more worryingly, 3% of Americans own half of the civilian guns in the US and the top 3% of guns owners have more than 25 guns each. The National Rifle Association for America, (NRA), is the most prominent group who lobbies for Americans’ right to own guns, and challenges any gun control legislation. It is the main scapegoat for the continual failure of gun legislation, which considering its enormous influence on Washington, is justified.
The NRA, is a tax-exempt non-profit organisation that
appears in the news with increasing frequency as the worrying number of school
shootings rise each year. The group was founded in 1871 to “promote and
encourage rifle shooting” and began political lobbying in 1934 when it started
mailing its members information about upcoming firearms bills. Then, in the
1970s, it began to direct funds to legislators, even forming a new lobbying
section - the Institute for Legislative Action. The problem with the NRA today
is not just over its staunch opposition to any gun regulations, but also to how
a small number of incredibly motivated people are pushing an agenda that does
not fit with the views of much of the US population.
There have been eight US school shootings resulting in
injury or death in 2018 alone, and 18 times when a gun has been fired on school
property. The latest happened in Parkland, Florida. On Valentine's Day, 17
people were killed by a former pupil and the surviving students are taking a
stand calling for changes to American gun legislation. Powerful and emotive
speeches from the pupils, notably Jaclyn Corin, have been circulated
across all forms of media. Moreover, these pupils have organised a ‘March for
Our Lives’ on March 24 in Washington D.C., with the aim not to ban guns
completely, but simply to create regulations on semi-automatic weapons.
What is really drawing media attention with these students
was when Cameron Kasky, one of the students from Parkland, asked Marco Rubio,
the junior Senator for Florida, asking if he “can tell [him] right now that you
[Rubio] will not accept a single donation from the NRA”. At Kasky’s question
the crowd immediately stood up and cheered, which is unsurprising due to the
highest number of Americans supporting stricter stricter gun control laws than
ever. But, Rubio is one of the top ten career beneficiaries of NRA campaign spending
- receiving many millions of dollars - and, unsurprisingly, said no, he would
not start to refuse their money.
With Kasky saying he would have “asked the NRA lady... how
she can look into the mirror considering the fact she has children”, it raises
questions of whether the NRA truly has, as people believe, “a chokehold on
Congress”, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, or does the influence truly come, as Rubio
claimed, “not from money… but the millions who agree with the agenda”.
A large portion of the NRA’s power does come from money. In
the 2018 election cycle, gun rights groups outspent the competition 40 to 1,
making nearly $600,000 in direct contributions and independent expenditures on
behalf of congressional candidates, whereas gun control groups barely spent
$14,000. The breadth of campaign support provided by the NRA is not something
new with them being deeply ingrained into the election process the organisation
started campaigning in the 1970s.
The NRA outspends all of the US’ gun control advocacy
groups combined and spends $250 million a year for political purposes. In 2016,
they spent $14.4 million on supporting 44 candidates, who won, and $34.4m
opposing 19, who lost. But, only $4.1 million was spent on influencing policy
in 2017. Whilst appearing large this is one of the smaller sums with the
National Association of Realtors paying out $32.2 million on lobbying housing
issues in the same time span. So, Rubio’s claim that it is the people not the
money enacting change is not entirely accurate as the NRA still spends
extortionate amounts; but, its influence is undoubtedly out of proportion to
their financial firepower.
Adam Winkler, professor of constitutional law at UCLA
School of Law, argues: “The NRA is not successful because of
its money. To be sure, it is hard to be a force in American politics without
money. The NRA has money that it uses to help its favored candidates get
elected. But the real source of its power, I believe, comes from voters.”
The NRA claims to have more than five million members which
again, appears impressive at first, but it is frequently accused of
artificially inflating the number, with the real figure suggested to be around
3 million. But, the NRA’s success is not derived from the quantity of the
people in the group, but rather their heightened political awareness. Analysts
tend to point towards the NRA’s considerable indirect influence through its
highly politically engaged membership who will vote on this single issue as a
main reason for their power. With the NRA grading members of Congress from A to
F on their friendliness to gun rights, and announces these publically, members
are encouraged to vote solely on those who score highly on the scale. But NRA
members do more than vote, they go to meetings, write letters, and contact
people, and with so few American undertaking these actions they have an
extremely large effect. Their website even has alerts about gun control bills
which goes into the detail of the exact room and timing so members can be
better prepared to oppose.
The ability to mobilise members using a classic example of
advertising’s ‘big idea’ helps trace this groups motivation. The NRA
relentlessly promotes the right to a gun as sacrosanct and connects it to
America’s core values of personal liberty and individualism. It uses fear of
government control and rising crime rates, concerns made even more prominent
with the ‘left behind’ voters in Trump’s America. The NRA pushes these worries
even further by playing on the idea gun rights are perpetually at risk, every
measure, however sensible, translates into ‘we are coming for your guns’. When
members are motivated by fear, they are going to turn out and will promote the
NRA’s message. Furthermore, as the members are only defending a single issue,
which they have as they want at the moment, there is no need for them to devise
a plan for allowing guns, they simply need to say ‘no’. Sadly, a simple no is
far more effective than a spiel on the benefits of gun regulations, and is easy
for this group to utilise.
The NRA relies heavily on an interpretation of the Second
Amendment which it argues gives US citizens the right to bear arms. Basing the
majority of its argument on the Constitution also leads to it conveniently
forget that the Constitution was written in the 18th century, the same one
which viewed slaves as “other persons” who counted as ⅗ of a white
person. The NRA also claims that guns will help to solve the problem of mass
shooting- after the Sandy Hook shooting, La Pierre, the head of the
Association, claimed an armed guard with a gun would have solved the problem,
in a similar way to Trump claiming the need to arm teachers.
One of the most horrifying aspects of the NRA is how it
blocks information and research. The leading national public health institute
in the US is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC examined
gun violence in the 1980s to mid-90s until a 1993 study it funded found gun
ownership was a risk factor for homicide at home. This infuriated the NRA so
much it lobbied Congress to shut down the CDC division which researched gun
violence. After three years, lifetime NRA member, Rep. Jay Dickey, added an
amendment to the bill funding the CDC saying “none of the funds made available for injury
prevention and control" were allowed to be used to study or promote gun
control. At the same time, the CDC experienced a cut of $2.6 million from
Congress, the exact amount the CDC had spent on gun violence studies the year
before, thus establishing the message that if you study gun violence you will
risk your career and agency’s funding. Today, the CDC is helpless at
researching gun violence, the leading cause of premature death in the US and
there has appeared to be very little change to this limitation, although
Democrats frequently rally against the Dickey amendment.
This oppression is not exclusive to
research - for decades the NRA has kept the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives (ATF) in a very limited capacity. It lobbies against nominated
directors and pushes Congress to curtail their ability to track gun crimes and
regulate firearms. This is mainly conducted through rules on the way the ATF is
allowed to spend money and the funding provision which forbids the ATF from
using electronic databases to trace gun owners, forcing them to rely on paper
records, making it even harder to control who has a gun and who should be
prevented.
Also, the NRA has helped make it so the
system does not just imply bans on gun discussions, it enforces them by law.
For example, the Firearm Owners Privacy Act ensures that a doctor can lose
their license for asking parents if they know how to store guns safely. Around
1.7 million American children live in homes where guns are not kept out of
their reach, a statistic which could be lessened without this law.
Many in congress rely heavily on the NRA’s largesse to
remain in office and fear crossing a group with such active supporters who will
undoubtedly turn out to vote. The NRA has contributed over $1 million in
funding for seven sitting senators, all Republicans, with funding for some
stretching back into the 1980s. The heavy reliance of politicians on the NRA
for funding means none of these have the incentive to pass gun legislation and
to risk their careers. David Jolly, a former Republican Congressman in Florida,
had the NRA’s support when he ran against a Democrat in 2014. He won and then
easily won the re-election to a full term the following November. After the
Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Jolly introduced a moderate gun control
bill in the House which would prohibit people on terrorist watchlists from
purchasing guns but still allow those who were refused gun permits to argue
their case to a federal judge. The NRA immediately pulled its support and
Jolly’s bill failed in the House, and he lost the election that year, mostly
due to the lack of the NRA’s funds.
Despite the NRA’s message, gun control does help stop
shootings, saying otherwise is a null argument and claiming America is an
exception is due to the self-aggrandising exceptionalism the US loves to cover
itself with. It’s hard to find statistics coming out of the US which can help
prove gun regulation works - mostly thanks to the aforementioned oppression of
the CDC - but there are worldwide examples of it working. The few that
originate from the US show that the spike in gun purchases after the Sandy Hook
shooting in 2012 led to an increase in accidental gun deaths, mostly in the
young American children it was aimed at protecting. Furthermore, the Lautenberg
amendment to the 1968 Gun Control Act disqualified those with a misdemeanor
qualification for domestic violence from owning weapons, leading to 17%
decrease in the gun murders of female partners and the states with stricter
background checks have fewer school shootings. Outside the US, Australia
introduced a comprehensive fun control regime after a massacre in Tasmania which
dropped the number of mass shootings to zero. Whilst the same legislation would
not work in the US, due to the fundamentally different relationship each
country has to guns, it does showcase how this legislation does work and will
help to stop the senseless deaths of innocent people.
But, there is a potential for America to remove itself from
the NRA’s pervasive influence. Following the furore after the shooting and anti-NRA
hashtag campaign consumers began to threaten to boycott a number of companies,
who then announced plans to cut their ties to the NRA. Whether these changes
will last as the intense feelings die down and America becomes focused on
another Trump scandal, it is hard to predict. But, 77% of Americans believe
Congress is not doing enough to prevent mass shootings, so there is a faint
glimmer of hope that if Washington listens to its people there will be some
legislation pushed through, however minor, at last. Obama failed repeatedly to
do this, mostly due to the Republican controlled House and Senate, and with the
student protests there is hope. However, whilst a President who received $30m
to his electoral campaign from the NRA tweets: "What many people don't understand, or don't want to understand, is that Wayne, Chris and the folks who work so hard at the @NRA are Great People and Great American Patriots. They love our Country and will do the right thing," from Mar-a-Lago in the wake of the Florida shooting, when Obama had finalised gun legislation, it is hard to see any prospect of change.
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