
The National Rifle Association reacted to Sen. Kamala Harris’ (D-CA) selection as Democratic presidential presumptive nominee Joe Biden’s running mate with this nonsensical attack: “Harris's presidential campaign died soon after announcing extreme gun control agendas.”
The NRA deployed a similar attack against Harris, and other Democratic candidates, during the primary and it made as little sense then as it does now. Democrats running for the 2020 presidency collectively took stronger positions on gun regulation than at any time in recent history, reflecting changing attitudes of the public and especially supporters of the Democratic Party.
The NRA’s narrative -- that supporting extensive gun regulation was a campaign killer for Democrats in the 2020 primary -- is an amateurish attempt at deception and comes in the first election cycle since the gun group’s highly public falling out with advertising firm Ackerman McQueen, which had crafted the NRA’s public messaging for decades. The NRA -- which is facing dissolution as a nonprofit following years of alleged corruption and financial fraud -- has pledged to spend tens of millions of dollars to reelect President Trump, though so far it has yet to spend even $1 million.
Shortly after Harris was announced as the vice president pick, the NRA took to social media to issue its response. In an August 11 tweet, the NRA applied a filter to an image of Harris and claimed that she and Biden “will dismantle the Second Amendment.”