If I were in Congress, I’d support impeaching Trump for allowing (not to mention encouraging) the bump stock ban. That Trump administration regulation is an abrogation of his oath to support and defend the Constitution. I thank God every day that Hillary did not win the 2016 election, and that Republican voters rejected folks like Jeb Bush, Lindsey Graham, and the others who Trump opposed in the primaries. But if we want to pass on the Blessings of Liberty to generations yet to come, we must do better, much better, than Trump has done.
The Washington Times has a story on p. A4 today titled “Despite bump stock ban, gun rights advocates strongly support Trump; NRA meeting attendees say president checking off right boxes”:
INDIANAPOLIS | Some gun rights advocates are revolting against the Trump administrations bump stock ban, but attendees at the National Rifle Associations annual meetings say they give President Trump a pass and are still behind him.
[photo caption] A man looks at cases of firearms in the halls of the Indianapolis Convention Center on Thursday where members of the National Rifle Association will be holding its 148th annual meetings in Indianapolis. The groups meetings come at a tumultuous time within the gun-rights organization.
[photo credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS]
You know what? I didnt even know what a bump stock was, said Patrick Callahan, 61, from Wyoming. I have no problem with a bump stock being banned, to be honest with you. I think theres always balances.
Mr. Callahan said hes been happy with Mr. Trump overall and that hell be voting for him in 2020, saying his willingness to mix things up with the press and his political opponents is a welcome contrast to other recent GOP nominees.
Trump is the type of fighter you need, he said. Youre in a knife fight at 3 a.m. in a back alley and you need to be able to fight back, and bring a bigger knife or a gun its rough and tumble, and the Democrats play that way.
On Friday, Mr. Trump will speak to the NRA for the third straight year as president, and his appearance will be the highlight for many attendees.
They say hes still checking all the right boxes for them, defending their Second Amendment rights and battling the Democrat-led states who are pushing for more restrictions.
Even the bump stock ban, which irked some leaders within the gun-rights movement, doesnt bother NRA rank-and-file members.
Thats fine. We dont need them, said Daryl Belik, 72, a retired farmer from North Dakota who praised the presidents approach. Hes doing what he feels right in his mind, and thats what I think most of us want.
The administration announced in December that it was banning the devices, which attach to semiautomatic rifles to mimic the rate of machine-gun fire, under the law that already bans almost all ownership of machine guns.
Gun rights advocates, including groups like Gun Owners of America and the Firearms Policy Foundation, promptly sued. They said the administration was improperly reversing past rulings by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) that the devices themselves arent weapons and thus outside what the government is allowed to regulate.
The federal courts, including the Supreme Court, have turned aside the challenges thus far.
The Justice Department said it took a fresh look at the issue after the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting, in which the gunman used bump stocks to rain fire down on concertgoers, killing 58 people, and concluded that the devices should be defined as machine guns.
Brett Meeker, 61, from Pennsylvania, said hes less concerned about bump stocks than he is the rhetorical or legislative assault on gun rights.
He said he was at first wary of Mr. Trump, saying he figured him to be a New York liberal playboy.
But the party establishments antipathy to Mr. Trump proved endearing to Mr. Meeker.
I mean, when all the former Republican presidents are against him to me, maybe thats a good idea, he said, adding that Mr. Trump has generally followed through on his campaign pledges.
I figured its just another guy telling you what you want to hear, but hes been pretty true to it and for that, Ive been very pleased, he said. I wasnt sure what to expect.
The massive exhibit hall at the Indiana Convention Center will also officially open Friday for convention attendees, who were greeted Thursday by signs touting miles of aisles of guns and gear to peruse, firearms already on display for raffle, and giant images of NRA figures like Oliver North, the groups president.
Mr. Belik said attendees need to show Democrats and gun control advocates who are talking about banning guns like the AR-15 that theyre not about to cede that debate.
Theyll go after everything. Thats what were here for, he said.
So?