Chris W. Cox, the NRA’s chief lobbyist, said he was responding to recent comments made by Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer, a gun-loving Democrat who has earned the group’s backing in his re-election bid.
Schweitzer told reporters this week that Obama “ain’t ever going to take your gun away” and suggested there was little difference between the Democrat and Republican John McCain. The NRA said Schweitzer was misrepresenting the candidates’ positions.
Cox said, while the NRA disagrees with Schweitzer’s opinion, the group has no plans to take back its endorsement of the governor, who is up for re-election in November.
Schweitzer said Wednesday that he stands by his comments, which included the assertion that people who vote solely on the gun issue may look to Libertarian candidate Bob Barr in November. Barr has earned an “A” from the NRA, while McCain had received a “C” and Obama an “F.”
“I don’t hand out these report cards around here,” Schweitzer said. “Barr has an A or A+, and neither of the other candidates do. That is the point I was making, and I stand by it.”
Schweitzer, who will be speaking at the Democratic National Convention later this month, said he believes Obama on guns.
“I heard him tell us in Montana that he is not going to take our guns away,” the governor said.
The Obama campaign disputed Cox’s comments, saying the candidate has been honest about his position on guns.
“The NRA is wrong to suggest we are misleading anybody,” said campaign spokesman Caleb Weaver, adding “gun owners have nothing to fear from Barack Obama.”
Weaver said Schweitzer was correct when he said Obama is more outspoken than McCain on protecting hunting access to public lands.
“Despite the knee-jerk reaction from the NRA’s lobbyist in Washington D.C., Schweitzer’s argument is valid,” Weaver said. “Gov. Schweitzer’s point was that McCain’s record on gun issues has been at odds with the NRA on some of the NRA’s key issues, and that for voters who care about these issues and also like to hunt, fish, and camp, Barack Obama’s strong stance on improving access to public lands will have strong appeal to Montana voters.”
The Obama campaign has stressed to Western voters that the candidate’s support of “sensible” gun control won’t get in the way of their traditions. But it has not released specifics on what type of gun measures Obama would deem sensible.
Cox said there is a big difference between Obama and McCain on the gun issue.
McCain, Cox acknowledged, did have a high-profile split from the group on campaign finance and gun show laws. But the Republican has been solidly on the side of the NRA on most everything else for 20 years.
The NRA plans to spend $40 million nationally this campaign season, and has yet to determine how much will be spent in individual states.
“John McCain does not have a perfect voting record. Barack Obama does have perfect voting record: perfectly awful,” Cox said. “We are going to expose him for what he really is. We are going to make sure every gun owner in Montana and America knows the truth.”
|
![]() |
Add your comment now! Write your comment in the form below.
(Email address is for verification only. If you'd like to email a story, look for the link above)

