The Denver Post

At convention, blame not guns

- By Glenn Thrush

» One by one, the gun rights activists and politician­s who showed up at the National Rifle Associatio­n convention Friday said they were appalled, horrified and shaken by the massacre of 19 children and two adults a few days earlier in Uvalde, Texas.

One by one, they then rejected any suggestion that gun control measures were needed to stop mass shootings. They blamed the atrocities on factors that had nothing to do with firearms — the breakdown of the American family, untreated mental illness, bullying on social media, violent video games and the inexplicab­le existence of “evil.”

Above all, they sought to divert pressure to support popular overhauls like expanded background checks by seizing on the issue of school safety, amid reports that the gunman in Uvalde gained easy access to Robb Elementary School through an unguarded door.

Former President Donald Trump, speaking at the event’s keynote session late Friday, called for “impenetrab­le security at every school all across our land,” adding that “schools should be the single hardest target.”

He began his remarks by somberly reciting the names of those killed in Uvalde to the toll of recorded church bells. But he quickly jumped on the attack, blaming President Joe Biden, who has passed billions in education aid, for increasing military spending instead of paying for greater school security.

In 2018, after the shooting in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 students, the Trump administra­tion convened a school safety commission. Its most concrete step was to repeal school policies meant to ensure that minority children were not unfairly discipline­d, which critics said did not directly address the issue of gun violence.

Trump was greeted by thunderous applause from supporters, some of them wearing oversized NRA convention credential­s over their fading Trump-pence T-shirts.

Yet behind the bravado was an awkward modulation between despair and defiance. A convention that promised to be a test for an NRA weakened by scandal and internal conflict, even before Uvalde, spotlighte­d the struggle in the Republican Party to reconcile near-total opposition to gun control with growing outrage after a spate of mass killings facilitate­d by easy access to semi-automatic weapons.

“They have been doing this for years,” said Kellye Burke, 54, a gun control activist from Houston who participat­ed in a protest against the NRA in the park across from the convention center. “They talk about the tragedy, then blame it on something other than guns.”

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