Meeting of Members – Resolution Three

The third resolution considered at the 2025 Meeting of Members was offered by yours truly. It was my resolution calling for transparency by posting our Form 990s, an up-to-date version of the Bylaws, minutes of the Board of Directors meetings, and a list of Board committees with a listing of members. It also called for a feasibility study by the Board on livestreaming our Board of Directors meetings. Upon the advice of Amanda Suffecool, I kept the wording of the resolution as bare bones as I could.

Here is the resolution as submitted:

WHEREAS, the National Rifle Association as an effective organization that exists for the benefit of its members must be transparent in its actions, finances, and organizational rules;  and

WHEREAS, an enhanced commitment to transparency enhances and extends the official NRA Compliance Commitments to Members; and

WHEREAS, transparency is a critical component in reinvigorating membership; therefore be it

RESOLVED, that, on this 26th day of April, 2025, the members of the National Rifle Association of America here gathered at the Annual Meeting of Members in Atlanta, Georgia do hereby request the NRA Board of Directors to create a NRA members-only webpage; and

RESOLVED, that we, the members here gathered, further request the NRA Board of Directors to include on this NRA members-only webpage an up-to-date edition of the bylaws, the past three years of the organization’s IRS Form 990 filings, the  minutes of all Board of Directors (meetings) for the past year as well as all future meetings, and a list of all the Board committees including their membership ; and

RESOLVED, that we, the members here gathered, further request the NRA Board of Directors to investigate the feasibility of live-streaming Board meetings with a report of their findings to be published in the Official Journal.

If you have read my report or that of Stephen Gutowski in The Reload, you know that this resolution passed overwhelmingly. Not only did it pass but it was sent directly to the Board of Directors without referral to any committee. According to Stephen, he counted about six No votes.

What seemed to be the primary objection to my resolution was about the costs of doing this. I’d like to address this. First, every filing or document that I requested to be put on a webpage that could accessed by members only would have already been created by NRA staff. The only cost might be the less than hour time of the webmaster to upload the documents. Next, a members only portal does not need to be created as one already exists!

If you go to www.nra.org, you will see a link that leads to a Member Services page. See where I have circled in red.

Member services allows one to access their membership information and requires a log-on. You can set up your own User ID and Password as a first time user. I had forgotten my password so had to have it reset and it just took a call to toll-free number to do it. As you can see in the picture below where I have circled, the NRA’s Annual Compliance Report to Members is already there. Adding additional documents is no big deal.

What has been lost by the NRA in the last few years is trust. Transparency builds trust. Trust gets old members to return and encourages new people to join. Posting these documents is an easy and cost-effective first step in our efforts to rebuild trust in the organization.

Meeting Of Members – Resolution Two

The second resolution offered at the 2025 NRA Meeting of Members was also by Ronald Andring, Sr. This resolution condemned the past collusion of the Executive VP of the NRA in manipulating the nomination and election process. As was revealed in both the New York AG’s trial and by the podcast Gangster Capitalism, Wayne LaPierre had sought to have a “friendly” Board of Directors elected. He did this by using monies from his budget to campaign for the 76th Director and by using his gatekeeper Millie Hallow as an intermediary between himself and the Nominating Committee.

This resolution, unlike Ron’s earlier resolution, was defeated. I spoke with Ron after the Meeting of Members and he was still satisfied despite not having both of his resolutions adopted. He was able to be heard and to get his information out into the public arena.

Meeting Of Members – Resolution One

Ronald Andring, Sr. offered the first resolution to be discussed at the 2025 NRA Meeting of Members. The resolution dealt with conflicts of interest and offered an amendment to the NRA Bylaws. Accompanying his resolution was a compilation of insider payments. I have embedded both of these below.

There was considerable discussion of Ron’s resolution. As discussed in my post on the Meeting of Members, the resolution was eventually forwarded to the Bylaws & Resolutions Committee for consideration and further refinement. While many resolutions in the past have been forwarded to that committee to die a quiet death, I do not think that will be the case here. Part of the reason is that the referral was done by a paper ballot vote by the members assembled. A long time observer noted this was the first time she has seen this happening in over 25 years of attending these meetings. The second part of the reason is that it was requested that Ron be appointed to the Bylaws & Resolutions Committee to work specifically on this bylaw amendment.

Running By Petition Enters 21st Century

One of the stumbling blocks to get on the ballot for NRA Board of Directors by petition was that it required the candidate to get signatures in ink on a paper petition. Judge Joel Cohen referred to this in the New York trial as “antiquated” and “20th Century”.

He was correct and he said in his Final Order that an online alternative must be offered. With the petition process opening at approximately 2pm on Saturday at the close of the Meeting of Members, candidates can now gather petition signatures either the old fashioned way on paper or through electronic signatures. They just need to send a request to NRA Secretary John Frazer for the petition packet and an online petition link. Just email Mr. Frazer at john.frazer@nrahq.org

My longtime friend and fellow Board member Amanda Suffecool agreed to be one of the trial candidates. Both the Complementary Spouse and I have signed her petition. It could not be easier as you can do it on a smart phone, a tablet, or a regular computer. It just asks for name, address, and membership number. Then you sign with your mouse or finger tip, hit submit, and it is done.

Here is Amanda’s petition. If you are a NRA Voting Member (life or five year continuous annual member), please sign!

My good friend Todd Vandermyde has decided to run again. He just barely missed being elected and we need people like Todd on the Board. I could really see him shaking up the Legislative Policy Committee given his decades of experience as a 2A lobbyist in the lion’s den of the Illinois General Assembly.

Here is Todd’s petition.

If you know of other reform minded activists who wish to run by petition, let them know how to obtain the link. I think this is a change that needed to come. One advantage to using the online petition is that candidates know how many signatures have been gathered and they know they are valid so long as the system accepts them. If they run into issues, they should contact the Office of the Secretary. The NRA’s records could have had the signer’s name misspelled.

One final note: Candidates will need 363 valid signatures to qualify for the ballot. According to the Bylaws Article VIII, Sec. 3(b), there is a limit of five candidates qualifying by petition per state. If more than five qualify, then it will be the top five in terms of numbers of signatures obtained.