Erich Pratt, communications director for Gun Owners of America, told Andrea Mitchell Wednesday that none of President Obama’s 23 gun control measures unveiled Wednesday would help prevent another shooting spree like the one in Newtown, Connecticut last month that left twenty young children and six educators dead.
“We don’t think that any of the things that he’s proposing would have stopped what happened in Connecticut,” Pratt said on Andrea Mitchell Reports. “Sadly, what I think is missing is what actually would help. That’s what 85% of the American people support is having an armed teacher or principal to be able to stop a school shooting…I think there’s a big misreading of the political wings, and just like in 1994 with the congress, in 2000 with the presidency, I think there should be a real wake up call politically, a real backlash happening here.”
Mitchell challenged Pratt, pointing to a Pew poll released this week reporting 57% of Americans oppose more teachers and school officials having guns.
A new NRA ad released Tuesday attempts to gin up support for armed adults in schools by calling the president “an elitist hypocrite” for utilizing Secret Service protection for his daughters, Malia, 14, and Sasha, 11.
The ad asks, “Are the president’s kids more important than yours? Then why is he skeptical about putting armed security in our schools when his kids are protected by armed guards at their school?”
Asked whether the ad is “over the line,” Pratt said, “Why is it over the line for the NRA to talk about children, but it’s not over the line for the president to bring in children? That’s the disconnect.”
Pratt also told Mitchell that President Obama “should have been apologizing to those children for breaking their piggy banks to pay off the national debt.” He said he was referring to the four children seated near the President’s podium at Wednesday’s press conference.
Mitchell pointed out that those children submitted letters to President Obama after the Newtown shooting and, with their parents permission, voluntarily became a part of the political debate—unlike Obama’s daughters. “Children of presidents have been off limits for decades,” Mitchell said.








