Trump’s stance meshed with the defiant mood of the meeting, held days after the massacre at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, that has renewed anger and political recriminations over Washington’s paralysis on gun control. Several hundred protesters rallied outside the meeting venue earlier Friday.
While President Joe Biden suggested after Tuesday’s shooting that Americans should “stand up to the gun lobby,” Trump said he’d keep his commitment to the NRA, one of his major supporters. The group was the largest outside financial backer of his 2016 campaign, spending $31 million to help elect him, and it spent $16.6 million on his re-election campaign in 2020, according to OpenSecrets.