Posted on 11/10/2016 4:19:23 PM PST by RC one
Election results mark a continuation of the group's impressive success rate when making large investments on candidates.
The National Rifle Association took a historic gamble in 2016, and it paid off in a huge way.
The gun rights group placed multimillion-dollar bets on Donald Trump and six Republican Senate candidates locked in highly competitive races. It poured $50.2 million, or 96 percent of its total outside spending, into these races, and lost only one an open seat in Nevada, vacated by the Democratic Minority Leader, Harry Reid. That race cost the NRA roughly $2.5 million
The NRAs big night came as a tidal wave of white voters without college degrees voted overwhelmingly for Trump, leading to one of the biggest election-night upsets in memory. The reasons why this demographic turned out in such high numbers for the GOP nominee will be parsed for years, and it is not at all clear how much of a factor his embrace of the NRAs hardline position on gun rights played into the outcome.
But the NRAs investment, which was more than any other outside group, paid for a slew of ads that directly targeted the same voters who propelled Trump to victory. The organizations radio and television spots sought to cast Hillary Clinton and the Democratic rivals of its preferred Senate candidates as an existential threat to the Second Amendment, and national security. It is a message that resonates in the gun belt, a swath of primarily Southern and Midwestern states where Trump achieved some of his most consequential victories.
In October alone, according to the Center for Public Integrity, roughly one out of every 20 television ads in Pennsylvania was sponsored by the NRA. That same month, the group paid for one in nine ads in North Carolina, and one of every eight in Ohio. The ads imply that Clinton and Democrats would leave law-and-order abiding citizens defenseless. In one spot, a woman is alone in bed when a burglar breaks into her home. The narrator intones, Dont let Hillary leave you protected with nothing but a phone.
Trump won all three states, and the NRAs preferred Senate candidates also swept to victory.
The NRAs largest 2016 outlay was the $30.3 million it spent in support of Trump.
In North Carolina, the group spent $6.2 million on the incumbent Republican Senator Richard Burr, the most it has ever invested in a down-ballot race. Burr won by about six percentage points. Elsewhere, the NRA helped elect Senators Marco Rubio in Florida; Roy Blunt in Missouri; Todd Young in Indiana; and Rob Portman in Ohio. It spent between $2 million and $3.2 million on each of those races.
The numbers account for independent expendituresunrestricted money spent on ads and other media, independent of official campaigns.
The 2016 election results represent a continuation of the NRAs impressive success rate when making substantial investments in closely-contested races. Over the three prior election cycles, the group disbursed $1 million dollars or more toward 14 congressional races, and achieved its desired outcome 11 times. To help Republicans win back the Senate in 2014, it spent $20.6 million dollars on five key races in the upper chamber, and in each of them, its preferred candidate won.
This election cycle, the NRA spent more than $52 milliona number that will rise as final campaign finance figures are tallied to carry on its effort to increase Republican control of government, a mission that has ramped up since the Citizens United decision in 2010, when the Supreme Court removed caps on independent expenditures. The sum is by far the greatest in the organizations history, smashing its previous record, of $31.7 million, set in 2014.
In federal elections, the NRA typically ranks among heavyweight outside spending groups. For the second cycle in a row, it has earned a place in the top ten. But 2016 was a unique year for the organization, owing to the fact that many super PACs, like Karl Roves American Crossroads GPS, which spent roughly $115 million to elect Mitt Romney in 2012, declined to back Trump. The NRA stepped in to fill the void, putting at least $30.3 million on the line to help elect the real estate mogul, more than any other outside group including the leading Trump super PAC, which spent $20.3 million.
By comparison, the gun rights group deployed about $12.5 million to help Romney in 2012.
The close relationship between the NRA and Donald Trump began in May, when the organization endorsed the candidate earlier than it had ever endorsed a Republican presidential contender. Trump appeared before thousands of people at the NRA convention in Louisville, Kentucky, where he gleefully accepted the organizations official support.
The Second Amendment is under threat like never before, Trump told the crowd. Crooked Hillary is the most anti-gun, anti-Second Amendment candidate ever to run for office.
In July, the NRAs top lobbyist, Chris Cox, was given a prime speaking slot at the Republican National Convention. He reminded attendees that the next president would fill a Supreme Court vacancy, and the new Justice could directly affect gun rights.
A Hillary Clinton Supreme Court means your right to own a firearm is gone, he said.Before Election Day, polls suggested that the Senate, under Republican control since 2014, was up for grabs. Now in the position of defending the upper chamber, the NRA focused the majority of its resources on six toss-up seats, hoping to keep or flip them Republican.
The House, under Republican control before the election, was not expected to change hands, and so it was not a priority for the NRA. All told, it sprinkled roughly $1 million over 48 races. The group made two substantial investments in Republican incumbent candidates just under $215,000 in Lloyd Smucker of Pennsylvania, and about $175,000 in Bruce Poliquin of Maine. Both candidates won.
Hillary Clinton: Well, in addition to the NRA, the health insurance companies, the drug companies, the Iranians. Probably the Republicans.
*sob*
Those “freedom’s safest place” commercials were powerful.
Over the last year or two NRA has been airing really well done ads. Whoever they hired to do their ad campaign really knows how to deliver a powerful message.
Because he only listens to those in his echo chamber.
Now that we have halted any national gun control legislation for the forseeable future, the next step is for President Trump to start packing the federal courts with pro-2nd amendment Federal judges and Supreme Court Justices that will strike down these radical state gun control laws that Bloomberg and the like are pushing.
The NRA ads, partially in black and white, that said, “I am the NRA,” were very powerful. And many of us here participated in their airing. God bless the NRA. And everyone else who helped beat off the evil we faced.
Those NRA ads are more fun to watch than Hollywood movies.
I wish they would have spent some big bucks to defeat Bloomberg’s Prop 1 in Nevada - Universal Background Checks.
I really don’t need another gun but the CZ 97 BD 45 is mighty tempting
This just tightens my jaw.
I hav ehtree degrees in Engineering and the sciences, my brothers and sister all have degrees, and I have to work with at least a couple hundred people all with advanced degrees and I only know of one man who did not vote for Trump.
I will not even get into all my officer friends either retired or in the service who voted for Trump.
It is detestable to so flippantly throw in a sentence painting guns rights voters as not having advanced education.
I have three degrees.
I may be able to design things but my spell check abilities leave something to be desired.
Same here
Same here
Same here as well. B.B.A. in Accounting and also J.D. I can’t stand this narrative that gun rights advocates (and also Trump voters in general) are all uneducated. Well, if their definition of educated means I have to think like a brain-dead liberal, then I’ll gladly take that “uneducated” label and wear it as a badge of honor.
Working on my Life Membership through the EPL program. Just sent them another $50 towards that. Obviously it’s been money well spent so far.
While I had my wallet open, I contributed the same here. I know it’s small, but it’s something. After leeching your bandwidth here for years as a lurker, and as a new poster, I wanted to at least give a little something to show my appreciation to FR.
Same here, I have a Master’s degree. I used to care at how these leftocrats were condescending. I don’t care now, its part of the reason why they loose, that and all the rioting childishness.
Once again, the right to keep and bear arms is safe. For now.
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