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Romney has gun-rights support in his sights

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Zimmerman’s attorney has said the defendant will plead not guilty and invoke the “stand your ground” law.

Romney has said little about whether he favors such laws, though he has called the shooting a “terrible tragedy” and has said it was appropriate for prosecutors to look into the case.

After the shooting, Obama said, “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.” And while he said at the time that he supported the investigation, he didn’t address the issue of guns.

In fact, Obama has hardly talked about the issue since a couple of months after the January 2011 assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz., when the president promised to develop new steps on gun safety.

Romney hasn’t always been in the NRA’s good graces.

It was as a challenger to Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy in 1994 that Romney professed not to line up with the group.

When he was running for governor in 2002, the NRA shied away from making any endorsement and gave Romney’s Democratic opponent a better rating on gun-rights issues.

Massachusetts quadrupled its gun-licensing fee while Romney was governor. He also signed a 2004 law that made permanent a ban on assault-type weapons, though it was coupled with measures backed by gun-rights groups, such as a lengthening of the firearm license period from four to six years and the creation of an appeals board for people seeking to restore their gun licenses.

As he was considering his first presidential run in 2006, Romney signed up for a lifetime membership in the NRA.

For Brian Dorsey – a central Missouri turkey farmer who declares “I’m all about gun rights” – Romney’s appearance at the NRA convention in St. Louis is an important element in assuring Dorsey’s vote come November.

“It signals to me that he cares about gun owners and hunters,” Dorsey said.

While some gun-control advocates might be turned off by Romney’s association with the NRA, there’s little likelihood such activists were going to vote for him anyway, leaving little political downside for Romney’s appeals to NRA faithful, said Dave Robertson, a political science professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.


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