Washington, Dec 29 : One week after a school shooting that shocked Americans - with many
of the 27 victims buried and time allowed for prayers and investigation - the
National Rifle Association will dive in to the fierce national debate about gun
control.
The largest U.S. gun rights lobby plans a well-coordinated
public entrance to the conversation on how to prevent such tragedies, starting
with a rare news conference at a hotel across the street from the White
House.
NRA Chief Executive Wayne LaPierre and President David Keene will
then appear on separate television talk shows for their first interviews since
gunman Adam Lanza killed his mother, 20 young children and six adults in
Newtown, Connecticut.
Inside and outside the NRA, an organization with
powerful ties to politicians in Washington, expectations are the group will
offer condolences and condemn the killings but offer little in the way of
compromise over gun laws.
The group kept largely quiet in the first days
after the Connecticut shooting, citing "common decency" and the need to allow
time for mourning, prayer and a full investigation of the facts. It broke its
silence to say it wanted to contribute meaningfully to prevent another massacre
and announced its plans for the news conference.
"They will talk about
how terrible the violence is, about helping the victims, about violence in
society," said Robert Spitzer, a professor at the State University of New York
at Cortland and author of "The Politics of Gun Control."
Spitzer said he
did not expect the NRA media blitz to lay out specific plans because so many
within the organization consider the right to own guns absolute.
"If they
did, it would contradict the path they have been following for about the last 35
years," he said. "Much of their membership would declare war on their
leaders."
One NRA board member, Houston lawyer Charles Cotton, said the
NRA should not say much until it hears more from gun-control supporters like New
York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
"You can't say specifically what you want
to do before you sit around a table and talk about it," Cotton said.
NRA
board member Bob Barr, a former Georgia congressman, said he was skeptical any
new law would make a difference.
"None of the laws that the gun control
folks want to put into place would have prevented this shooting. I think that's
where we all start from," he said. Even proposed bans on guns known as assault
weapons would not cover all semi-automatic rifles, he said.
America's
unique gun culture means there are hundreds of millions of firearms in the
United States for hunting, self-defense and leisure, as well as illicit uses. No
one knows how many guns there are because there is no national
registry.
About 11,100 Americans died in gun-related killings during
2011, not including suicides, according to preliminary data from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
There were 19,766 suicides by
firearms in 2011, the CDC said.
The NRA uses political pressure against
individual lawmakers in Congress and in state legislatures to press for
loosening restrictions on gun sales and ownership while promoting hunting and
gun sports.
Gun-control proponents have been pushing for tighter gun
controls since the Newtown, Connecticut, school massacre, the fourth mass
shooting in the United States this year.
President Barack Obama has vowed
to present a detailed plan in January. Vice President Joe Biden held the first
meeting of an interagency effort among Cabinet members and law enforcement
officials.
"The president is absolutely committed to keeping the promise
that he will act," said Biden, who authored a crime bill in 1994 that included a
ban on some semiautomatic rifles that has since expired. "We have to take
action," he said.
Democrats in Congress who favor gun control have called
for quick votes on measures to ban assault weapons or high-capacity magazines,
hoping that the slaying of the 6- and 7-year olds in Newtown might be enough to
win over more lawmakers.
Lanza used a Bushmaster semiautomatic rifle,
police said.
The NRA's power is partly due to its large and active
membership, which reportedly has been growing rapidly since the Newtown
shootings. NRA officials did not immediately comment, but Fox News, citing a
source within the organization, said the group has been adding 8,000 new members
a day.
The NRA is frequently described as having 4 million members,
although nonprofit groups are not required to disclose their membership or how
they define the term.
At key moments, such as before votes in Congress,
many of those members flood lawmakers' offices with calls - a tactic few
organizations can pull off, and one that the NRA's opponents want to
imitate.
Mark Glaze, director of Mayors Against Illegal Guns, a group
co-led by Bloomberg, said his group orchestrated tens of thousands of calls that
jammed White House phones.
"It's the kind of thing that makes a
difference in public policy. It's the kind of thing the NRA does very well,"
Glaze said. "And that's the kind of movement that we have to build if we're
going to make any kind of difference."
There is a vast difference in
resources of the organizations lining up in the gun debate.
During 2011,
the NRA spent $3.1 million on lobbying lawmakers and federal agencies, while all
gun-control groups combined spent $280,000 - a ratio of 11-to-one - according to
records the groups filed with Congress.
Some of the NRA's money goes to
Washington lobbying and law firms not usually associated with gun rights. SNR
Denton, for instance, represents not only the NRA but major insurance, food and
pharmaceutical companies. Lobbyists there did not return calls.
On
another measure, that of spending on political campaigns, gun-control
organizations have been more competitive. Independence USA PAC, a vehicle for
Bloomberg's personal fortune on issues including gun control, spent $8.2 million
on the 2012 election, compared to the NRA's $18.9 million, according to the
Center for Responsive Politics.
The Brady Campaign to Prevent Violence,
named for President Ronald Reagan's press secretary James Brady who was injured
in a 1981 assassination attempt on Reagan, spent $5,816 on the election, much
lower than the $1.7 million it spent on the 2000 election, according to the
center.
Ends
SA/EN
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Gun lobbyists plan media push after Newtown massacre
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