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Trump defends rights of gun owners days after Texas massacre

Former President Donald Trump has defended the rights of gun owners in remarks to the National Rifle Association’s annual convention in Houston, three days after a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers at an elementary school on the other side of the state.

Trump paid tribute to the victims of the Texas shooting by reading out each child and teacher's name while bells tolled before he rejected calls for gun control.

"Sadly before the sun had even set on the horrible day of tragedy we witnessed a now familiar parade of cynical politicians looking to exploit the tears of sobbing families to increase their own power and take away our constitutional rights," Trump said.

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Former President Donald Trump speaks at NRA conference.

"Every time a disturbed or demented person commits such a hideous crime there is always growing effort by some in our society to use the suffering of others to advance their own extreme political agenda."

Trump added evil like the shooter in the Texas school massacre is a reason to arm and not disarm.

One by one, leaders like Trump took the stage at the NRA's annual convention and denounced the Texas massacre.

And one by one, they insisted that changing US gun laws or further restricting access to firearms was not the answer.

"We must not react to evil and tragedy by abandoning the Constitution or infringing on the rights of our law-abiding citizens," Texas Senator Ted Cruz said.

"Ultimately, as we all know, what stops armed bad guys is armed good guys."

People gather outside the George R. Brown Convention Center to protest the National Rifle Association's annual meeting in Houston, Friday, May 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Cruz accused those advocating for new gun control measures in the wake of the Uvalde elementary school shooting of "demagoguing" and "virtue-signaling."

He said that "there have been too damn many of these killings; we must act decisively to stop them." But he also said that gun control advocates' proposals "wouldn't have stopped these mass murders, and they know this."

Wayne LaPierre, the group's chief executive, began the event by saying that "every NRA member and I know every decent American is mourning right now.

"Twenty-one beautiful lives ruthlessly and indiscriminately extinguished by a criminal monster."

Still, he said that “restricting the fundamental human rights of law-abiding Americans to defend themselves is not the answer. It never has been.”

The several hundred people in the auditorium stood and bowed their heads in a moment of silence for the victims of the Uvalde school shooting. There were many empty seats.

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Protesters chant slogans outside the George R. Brown Convention Center to protest the National Rifle Association annual meeting in Houston, Friday, May 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Among the protesters outside, Democrat Beto O’Rourke, who is challenging Texas Governor Greg Abbott in the governor’s race, ticked off a list of previous school shootings and called on those attending the convention to “join us to make sure that this no longer happens in this country.”

“The time to have stopped Uvalde was right after Sandy Hook,” O'Rourke said.

"The time for us to have stopped Uvalde was right after Parkland. The time for us to have stopped Uvalde was right after Santa Fe High School.

"The time for us to stop the next mass shooting in this country is right now, right here, today with every single one of us.”

Some scheduled speakers and performers backed out of the event, including several Texas lawmakers and “American Pie” singer Don McLean, who said “it would be disrespectful” to go ahead with his act after the country’s latest mass shooting.

People gather by booths near some of the signage in the hallways outside of the exhibit halls at the NRA Annual Meeting held at the George R. Brown Convention Center Thursday, May 26, 2022, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said Friday morning that he had decided not to speak at an event breakfast after “prayerful consideration and discussion with NRA officials.”

The NRA said that people attending the gun show would “reflect on” the Uvalde school shooting, “pray for the victims, recognise our patriotic members and pledge to redouble our commitment to making our schools secure.”

The meeting is the first for the troubled organisation since 2019, following a two-year hiatus because of the pandemic.

The organisation has been trying to regroup following a period of serious legal and financial turmoil that included a failed bankruptcy effort, a class action lawsuit and a fraud investigation by New York's attorney general.

Once among the most powerful political organisations in the country, the NRA has seen its influence wane following a significant drop in political spending.

While President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress have renewed calls for stricter gun laws in the wake of the Uvalde shooting, NRA board members and others attending the conference dismissed talk of banning or limiting access to firearms.

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Mounted police officers tell protesters to move back across the street from the National Rifle Association annual meeting at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, Friday, May 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Larry Miller, 56, from Huntington Beach, California, said he had no problem with the NRA meeting taking place so soon after the Uvalde shooting.

He called the shooting “very sad and unfortunate” and said the gunman didn’t “have any respect for the people’s freedoms that we have here in this country.”

“We all share these rights, so to be respectful of other people’s rights is to respect other people’s lives, and I think with that kind of mentality, we should be here,” he said.

Samuel Thornburg, 43, a maintenance worker for Southwest Airlines in Houston who was attending the NRA meeting, said, “Guns are not evil. It’s the people that are committing the crime that are evil. Our schools need to be more locked. There need to be more guards."

Convention attendees look at various rifles and handguns in display cases that are being raffled off at the Gallery of Guns booth at the NRA Annual Meeting at the George R. Brown Convention Center Thursday, May 26, 2022, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

Inside the convention hall, thousands of people walked around, stopping at booths that featured displays of handguns, rifles, AR-style firearms, knives, clothing and gun racks. Outside, police set up metal barriers at a large park where hundreds of protesters and counterprotesters gathered in front of the downtown convention centre.

“Murderers!" some yelled in Spanish. “Shame on you!" others shouted at attendees.

Among the protesters was singer Little Joe, of the popular Tejano band Little Joe y La Familia, who said in the more than 60 years he's spent touring the world, no other country he’s been to has faced as many mass shootings as the US.

“Of course, this is the best country in the world," he said. “But what good does it do us if we can’t protect lives, especially of our children?”

Texas has experienced a series of mass shootings in recent years. During that time, the Republican-led Legislature and governor relaxed gun laws.

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Protesters hold a rally at Discovery Green Park, across the street from the National Rifle Association Annual Meeting held at the George R. Brown Convention Center Friday, May 27, 2022, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

There is precedent for the NRA to gather during local mourning and controversy. The organisation went ahead with a shortened version of its 1999 meeting in Denver roughly a week after the deadly shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado.

Actor Charlton Heston, the NRA president at that time, told attendees that “horrible acts” shouldn’t become opportunities to limit constitutional rights and he denounced critics for casting NRA members as “villains.”

Country music singer Larry Gatlin, who pulled out of a planned appearance at this year's convention, said he hoped “the NRA will rethink some of its outdated and ill-thought-out positions.”

“While I agree with most of the positions held by the NRA, I have come to believe that, while background checks would not stop every madman with a gun, it is at the very least a step in the right direction,” Gatlin said.

Country singers Lee Greenwood and Larry Stewart also withdrew, Variety reported.

Nancy Pablo, with the Alianza Latina International, holds crosses with photos of victims of the Robb Elementary School shooting as she protests with others at Discovery Green Park across the street from the National Rifle Association Annual Meeting at the George R. Brown Convention Center Friday, May 27, 2022, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

Most US adults think that mass shootings would occur less often if guns were harder to get and believe schools and other public places have become less safe than they were two decades ago, polling finds.

Many specific measures that would curb access to guns or ammunition also get majority support. A May AP-NORC poll found, for instance, that 51 per cent of US adults favour a nationwide ban on the sale of AR-15 rifles and similar semiautomatic weapons.

But the numbers are highly partisan, with 75 per cent of Democrats agreeing versus just 27 per cent of Republicans.

In addition to Patrick, two Texas congressmen who had been scheduled to speak Friday – US Senator John Cornyn and US Representative Dan Crenshaw – were no longer attending because of what their staff said were changes in their schedules.

Abbott, who was to attend, was to address the convention by prerecorded video instead.

Though personal firearms are allowed at the convention, the NRA said guns would not be permitted during the session featuring Trump because of Secret Service security protocols.

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