The Old Guard Is Not Fading Away

Those who thought that with the reformers ascendant in the NRA that the Old Guard would, to paraphrase Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, go quietly into the night would be mistaken. With the Nominating Committee chaired by Buz Mills and filled with reformers, many in the Old Guard whose terms are expiring are, by necessity, going the petition route.

Some like former NRA President Charles Cotton seem to have taken a stealth approach. From what I understand, he worked his connections in Texas to gather enough signatures to be on the ballot for 2026. I should note that he was not in attendance at the recent Fall Meeting of the NRA Board.

Others were working to gather signatures at the Board meeting and I did sign a number of petitions. I did this because I did see many of the Old Guard working cooperatively with the reformers to rebuild and rejuvenate the NRA. At the end of our semi-marathon Board meeting, many on both sides stood to say it was good to see everyone working together for the good of the NRA and gun rights.

A friend tipped me off to a website linking to the petitions of many of the Old Guard or newbies associated with them. It is called votersaware.com. There are petitions for existing directors such as Curtis Jenkins, Barbara Rumpel, and Eb Wilkinson among others. In addition you have potential candidates like Jeff Fleetham and Lane Ruhland who ran unsuccessfully in 2025 plus two or three other new candidates.

I don’t know who established this website but the Wayback Machine shows it having posts going back to 2016. Back then it was affiliated with an independent expenditure PAC. It seemed to have an anti-Hillary Clinton focus along with conservative leanings. Examining the page source of the page now, I did come across a reference to https://www.armsandammunitionnews.com. Using the Wayback Machine again, that led to an endorsement by Bob Barr of the list of candidates affiliated with the StrongNRA (Old Guard) team in the 2025 board election. If I had to make a guess, and it is only a guess, the website is somehow affiliated with him.

I am not saying to sign or not sign these petitions. Use your own good judgment.

I would, however, say re-electing Charles Cotton to the Board of Directors would be a travesty.

AMM-Con Schedule Of Events

If you plan on attending the Gun Rights Policy Conference in Salt Lake City and you are involved in new media, you should arrive early so you can take in the AMM-Con Second Amendment Media Conference. While I have missed a couple of recent AMM-Con conferences, I was there when it began. It has grown over the years from essentially bloggers and podcasters doing “show and tell” to what you see below.

The Schedule for the day!

9:00-9:05 Welcome

Charlie Cook, Riding Shotgun With Charlie, News2A, Armed Lifestyle Magazine

9:05-10:00 Pitch Sheet & Earned Media

Amanda Suffecool, Eye On The Target Radio, Women for Gun Rights, NRA Board of Directors

10:00-10:45 Actions Speak Louder Than Words

Michelle Cerino, Women’s Outdoor News, Shooting News

10:45-11:00 Break

11:00-12:00 Turning Strangers Into Raving Fans

Jarrad Markel, Student of the Gun

12:00-1:00 Lunch

1:00-1:45 Rebranding an Organization

Tanner Lineberry, Digital Media Manager, SAF

1:45-2:45 How to Report on 2A Supreme Court and Other Cases

Mark Smith, Host of Four Boxes Diner, Constitutional Lawyer

2:45-3:00 Break

3:00-4:00 AI Debate, Good or Bad?

Cheryl Todd & Amanda Suffecool vs Lee Williams & Mark Walters 

4:00-4:45 Speak Softly and Carry a Big Podcast

Michael Schwartz, Keynote Speaker, San Diego County Gun Owners, Gun Owners Radio

If you haven’t registered to attend, use this link.

If you have registered and are not going to be able to attend, please contact Charlie Cook at RidingShotgunWithCharlie@gmail.com so that he can adjust the number of lunches that need to be ordered.

As a reminder, AMM-Con like GRPC is free to attend.

Let’s Put Huey Over The Top

Huey Laugesen needs your help to get on the NRA ballot for 2026 by petition. He is close to having the required number of signatures but needs about 100 more to get over the top.

He is the executive director of the Colorado Shooting Sports Association and serves with me on the NRA Board’s Membership Committee. I have endorsed him in the past and continue that endorsement as I believe he has good ideas on how to increase membership in the NRA.

Just as importantly, he understands how tenuous our hold on gun rights can be. He is from Colorado which has transitioned from a good state on gun rights to one of the worst. Earlier this month, his organization with the assistance of the Mountain States Legal Foundation filed suit against the State of Colorado over its new permit to purchase law for certain semi-automatic firearms.

If you are a NRA Life Member (of any level) or an Annual Member with five or more years of continuous, unbroken membership you are eligible to sign Huey’s petition. As I and others have said, Huey is just the sort of younger member we need on the Board. Please sign his petition below if you have not already done so. Just as importantly, forward his petition link to fellow NRA members for them to sign.

https://nra.directnominations.net/Petitions/Sign/c1cb1f95-9d72-4df2-9be4-935a07d2e6e6?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

All signatures must be submitted by October 7th. Signatures done online are submitted immediately so I am urging you to go use the link above and not procrastinate on signing.

For My Friends In Virginia

The grassroots efforts by NRA-ILA in the Commonwealth of Virginia needs your help. If you live in Virginia and have some time to devote, this online meeting is for you.

Subject:Attend the NRA Virtual Election Meeting on Tuesday September 23rd!

view the web version of this email

NRA-ILA: Institute for Legislative ActionAttend the NRA Virtual Election Meeting on Tuesday September 23rd!With the upcoming elections quickly approaching here in the Commonwealth, we’re inviting you to join us for our virtual “Virginia Election Kick-Off Meeting” on Tuesday, September 23rd, at 7:00 p.m.

This important virtual meeting will cover:

Volunteer Opportunities – Learn how you can get involved and make a difference in our election efforts right here in Virginia.

Our Candidate Endorsement Process – Understand how the NRA evaluates and supports candidates who stand strong for our Second Amendment rights.Your voice and your time can make a real impact this election season. Whether you’re a seasoned volunteer or just looking to get started, this meeting is the perfect place to learn how you can be involved in this very important election!

Please click the RSVP button below to register for this special webinar:
When:
Tuesday, September 23rd, 7:00 p.m. EST
Where:
NRA-ILA Grassroots Virtual Microsoft Teams Classroom

Even though I live in North Carolina, I will be helping out the grassroots campaign by using their i360 texting platform. I certainly don’t want a Gov. Abigail Spanberger who is BFF with Everytown in an adjoining state.

Lexy Higgins who manages the grassroots program told me that they are really seeking local volunteers who can do door-to-door campaigning. You know for sure that Everytown and the Demanding Moms will be out in force and our side needs to be there as well.

Big Bore Rifle Shoot In NC

Do you have a big bore rifle sitting in the back of your gun safe? Is it feeling lonely and unused?

I have a solution for you!

The DSC Carolinas Foundation is hosting a big bore rifle shoot on October 18th at the Hyatt Farms Shooting Complex in Polkton, NC. This is only a 1-2 hour drive from most locations in the Piedmont of North Carolina and the Upstate of South Carolina.

The minimum caliber is that old European safari favorite of 9.3×62. You can go up from there and you will only need about a box of ammo to shoot all three stages including a moving buffalo target.

Pre-registration is required for both shooters and observers. The cost of the event is $75 for shooters and $35 for observers. This includes lunch.

There will also be a number of vendors there.

You don’t get many chances to shoot your big bore rifle like this so take advantage of it and help support the chapter’s conservation efforts.

“Gun Murders”

I listened to a commentary on CBS Sunday by James Fallows this morning. Fallows served at one time as President Jimmy Carter’s chief speechwriter and as the national correspondent for The Atlantic. In other words, he is someone who might be considered literate and have a facility with words.

While I cannot disagree with his two takeaways from the assassination of Charlie Kirk – real life is less fractured than life as portrayed by social media and to be wary of immediate reactions – his use of the terms “gun killing” and “political gun murders” seem to me to be particularly awkward. It was the assassin who killed Charlie Kirk and not the rifle. The rifle was only the tool. Likewise, referring to the assassinations of figures ranging from Lincoln to Bobby Kennedy to Charlie Kirk as “political gun murders” gives precedence to the tool and not to the action.

Using Fallows’ lexicon, one would suppose that when an anti-Semite tried to murder Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro by the way of arson, that would be “attempted fire murder”.

State of Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Media Services

Likewise, this past week we remembered the 24th anniversary of the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon by Al Qaeda terrorists using stolen jet airliners. Instead of calling it terrorism, are we now to call it “political jet murders” or “airliner terrorism”?

—Sean Adair / Reuters

Murder is murder. Terrorism is terrorism. The tool used is irrelevant. It is the intent of the evil doers that is what is important.

Location Is Everything…To The Anti’s

The assassination of Charlie Kirk yesterday was a political assassination. It could have happened about anywhere where he was speaking. That it happened at Utah Valley University where he was speaking with and to a crowd of students should be irrelevant.

That is, of course, unless you are Everytown and you need to score points.

It is as if the Everytown social media team had been binge watching House Hunters or some other real estate oriented TV show and heard the agent saying, “Location, location, location.” Then it clicked that Charlie Kirk was murdered on a college campus. Voila!

As Kat Stevens said in her excellent essay on the murder of Charlie Kirk, Everytown is trying to re-classify this political assassination as a school shooting.

I would urge everyone to read Kat’s essay. It should be must reading for this day after this horrific event. I would add that you should also keep Kirk’s wife and children in your prayers. I know what it is to lose a spouse but I had months to prepare for it. She and the kids did not and to see it happen in full Technicolor on every TV station only makes it worse.

H/T Kat

Transparency Rules!

The core values of the NRA include a commitment to transparency. It was based on this that I offered a resolution at the 2025 Meeting of Members in Atlanta that was successfully passed. It requested the Board of Directors to post on a members-only webpage certain documents including an up-to-date copy of the bylaws, IRS Form 990s, minutes from the Board of Directors’ meetings, and committee information. It also asked for a feasibility study on live-streaming Board meetings.

Today, in the Fall Board of Directors Meeting, I offered the following resolution which was passed unanimously.

I move that: 

  1. The EVP be directed to make available, through the NRA member self-service website, an up-to-date edition of the Bylaws, the Statements of Responsibility of all standing and special committees, and the past three years of the organization’s IRS Form 990 filings and Board of Directors meeting minutes, to be updated on an ongoing basis; and
  2. That the consideration of live-streaming Board meetings not be pursued at this time.

I worked with the Secretary’s Office to craft this resolution. The only thing missing in Part One from my original resolution in Atlanta was a list of committee members. I was asked to omit this due to security concerns for directors which I understand having spoken a few times with the NRA’s Director of Security.

As to the live-streaming of Board meetings, a cost estimate to live-stream each individual meeting was a minimum of $15,000. As much as I’d like people to be able to watch a Board meeting live, there are better uses for that money. Besides, in all honesty, much of the stuff we do in the meeting is not exciting and borders on the mundane. It is all important but the committee reports can drag out.

I don’t have the exact timeline for this information to be posted but I think it will be sooner than later. I want to thank my fellow directors for voting for transparency which is critical to the rebirth of the NRA. I also want to thank John Frazer and the Secretary’s Office for help on bringing this resolution to fore. Their help was crucial in getting the resolution before the Board for a vote.

NRA Fall Board Meeting Report

This week I’m at the NRA board and committee meetings being held in Reston, Virginia. The decision was made earlier that the fall and winter board meetings would be held in Virginia to cut travel costs. By being here, travel for all the associated staff that would normally have to travel to a meeting location in Texas or another state is eliminated. Whereas expenses like this in the past were fluffed off, they are not any more.

Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday are dedicated to committee meetings. The new leadership is committed to reinvigorating committees, reducing their numbers, and demanding results from committees. Just as importantly, committees are no longer little islands acting independently from the rest of the committees. Every committee meeting that I’ve attended has been very aware of the impact of their work and their decisions on other areas of the NRA.

There seems to be a new synergy. Thus, when the Membership Committee pushes for a phone app there is an awareness that this app can be used by NRA-ILA to send out legislative alerts. Likewise, the Legislative Policy Committee recognizes that Second Amendment policies formulated in their committee will have an impact on attracting new members and retaining existing ones.

Wednesday committees for me were the Audit Committee and the Membership Committee. The Audit Committee focused on the draft of the Form 990 and I will have a full report on the Form 990 when it is released. It would be violating my fiduciary duties to go into any further detail on the draft. The Membership Committee is committed to the development of a phone app for both the iPhone and Android platforms. There is a recognition that many of the younger generations use their phone for everything. Working with both the NRA’s in-house IT team and one of our outside marketing vendors, our goal is to have this app ready before the end of the year if not sooner. Naturally, such an app will be a work in progress as more features will be added to it over time.

My Thursday committee meetings were for the Hunting and Wildlife Conservation Committee and the Legislative Policy Committee. Matt Fleming is the new director of Hunting, Conservation, and Ranges replacing Peter Churchbourne who has moved over to the NRA Foundation as their Executive Director. He provided an update on hunting programs such as Hunters for the Hungry. We also heard from Keith Mark with Hunter Nation. Their work in energizing hunters to become active voters using their data driven approach provided the margin of victory in many swing states. There is a recognition that hunters are not necessarily 2A supporters and 2A supporters are not necessarily supporters of hunting initiatives. The job for both the NRA and the independent Hunter Nation is to bring both groups into alignment.

The Legislative Policy Committee heard reports from John Commerford, Director of NRA-ILA, and the directors for State and Local Affairs, Federal Affairs, and International Affairs. Much of the discussion was about the budget reconciliation act and the zeroing out of the taxes on suppressors and short-barreled firearms. The committee also heard reports from the chairs of other committees such as Grassroots and Media as there is a significant interplay between what Leg Policy does and its impact on the grassroots as well as the public image of the NRA.

I don’t have any official committee meeting scheduled for today until late this afternoon. However, I do intend to drop into the Legal Affairs Committee after lunch.

My overall impression of the last few days is that everyone, reformers and Old Guard, are committed to working together to bring the NRA back. I hope that continues on to the Board Meeting on Saturday.