GA GOP fires back at Delta for dropping NRA partnership

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/26/us/delta-nra-georgia-tax-cut.html

The lieutenant governor in Georgia threatened on Monday to kill a proposed lucrative tax cut for Delta Air Lines after the company eliminated a discount fare program for the National Rifle Association over the weekend.

The move by Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, who presides over the State Senate, immediately put the legislation in jeopardy and put him at loggerheads with other top state officials, including the governor, who had championed the tax deal. The showdown between one of Georgia’s most powerful politicians and one of the state’s largest employers was the latest clash in a national debate around guns after the deadly school shooting in Florida this month.

Mr. Cagle, a Republican, fired the salvo at Delta on Twitter on Monday afternoon, saying that the Atlanta-based company must restore its program with the N.R.A. “Corporations cannot attack conservatives and expect us not to fight back,” Mr. Cagle, who had expressed his support for the bill earlier this month, said on Twitter.

Mr. Cagle, who received an A+ grade by the N.R.A. when he was running for his position in 2006, did not return a call seeking comment on Monday evening. A spokeswoman for Gov. Nathan Deal, who had said the tax bill was necessary to encourage airlines to open direct routes from Georgia to destinations around the world, did not return an email seeking comment.

Other Republicans in the State Legislature also on Monday pulled back their support for the bill, which would grant a $50 million sales tax exemption on jet fuel, primarily benefiting Delta. Among the new critics was the House speaker, David Ralston, who said on Monday that he was disappointed with Delta and wished it had announced the decision before the House approved the tax bill on Thursday. The legislation moved the next day to the Senate, where it seemed to have broad support.

But on Saturday, that support all but evaporated after Delta announced it had eliminated a discount fare program for travelers to attend the N.R.A.’s 2018 annual meeting in May. The airline, which had come under growing pressure from its customers and others to cut ties with the gun group, said its decision “reflects the airline’s neutral status in the current national debate over gun control amid recent school shootings.”


Delta said in a statement on Saturday that it supported the Second Amendment but has refrained from political issues before. The airline noted that it withdrew financial support of a New York production of “Julius Caesar” last summer because it depicted the assassination of a Trump-like Roman ruler.

In the days after the shooting massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., more than a dozen companies, including MetLife Insurance, Symantec and Enterprise, cut ties with the N.R.A. Many were being threatened with boycotts over the deals and discounts they had offered to the gun group’s members.

Also on Monday, FedEx made an unusual move by declaring its opposition to the N.R.A.’s stance on gun policy and safety while saying it “does not and will not deny service or discriminate against any legal entity regardless of their policy positions or political views.”

FedEx said that the N.R.A. was one of hundreds of organizations whose members receive discounts on shipping rates. It also pushed for “urgent action” from local, state and federal politicians to prevent future mass shootings.

“FedEx opposes assault rifles being in the hands of civilians,” the company said in a statement. “While we strongly support the constitutional right of U.S. citizens to own firearms subject to appropriate background checks, FedEx views assault rifles and large-capacity magazines as an inherent potential danger to schools, workplaces, and communities when such weapons are misused.”

Over the weekend, celebrities like Julianne Moore, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Zach Braff posted their plans to boycott FedEx until the company stopped partnering with the N.R.A.

I find it interesting (if not troubling) that refusing to pick a side is no longer an option for celebrities and corporations.

I guess a few questions arise from this story:
1. Will Delta or the GA GOP back down first?
2. If neither back down, what is Delta's likely next move?
3. Is Lt. Gov. Casey crazy or crazy like a fox? Will angering one of the largest employers in the state be political suicide, or will the support for the NRA entrench his support with red meat conservative voters?
4. Or is this just Casey selling wolf tickets, just making a show while the tax bill goes through anyway?
 
Sounds like bullshit the government threatening Delta's free speech.
 
feel like I've covered this somewhere
 
The CEO of Delta is probably taking calls from other states right now.
 
That's stupid. Delta had no obligation to give discounts to NRA members, or any other members of other organizations.

I'd be interested to see what other orgs they are still supporting however.
 
I can't wait for gerrymandering to be abolished, so we don't have to hear stories about the GOP again.
 
Good. The NRA and all their members had absolutely NOTHING to do with the school shooting. They're being made scapegoats for absolutely no logical reason. Delta and other corporations dropping the NRA is signaling that they, too, are blaming people that are completely innocent.
 
Good. The NRA and all their members had absolutely NOTHING to do with the school shooting. They're being made scapegoats for absolutely no logical reason. Delta and other corporations dropping the NRA is signaling that they, too, are blaming people that are completely innocent.
Delta dropping the NRA association is them protecting their own business by distancing themselves from a problematic brand.

Are companies not allowed to make free market, free association decisions if it hurts rightwing groups?
 
GA GOP trying to infringe on that person's constitutionally protected rights. Not a good look.
 
Good. The NRA and all their members had absolutely NOTHING to do with the school shooting. They're being made scapegoats for absolutely no logical reason. Delta and other corporations dropping the NRA is signaling that they, too, are blaming people that are completely innocent.
The NRA is actively working to keep these kinds of weapons easily accessible.

They are in the mix.
 
Good. The NRA and all their members had absolutely NOTHING to do with the school shooting. They're being made scapegoats for absolutely no logical reason. Delta and other corporations dropping the NRA is signaling that they, too, are blaming people that are completely innocent.

Scapegoat? They pay off a political party to refuse most all sane gun restrictions that the American people want, when polled. They go on a public relations campaign in force every time a shooting happens.
 
Delta has already backed down. They issued an apology on Twitter - trying to say they did it to remain neutral.

It's a matter of time before they cave completely.
 
Scapegoat? They pay off a political party to refuse most all sane gun restrictions that the American people want, when polled. They go on a public relations campaign in force every time a shooting happens.
I've never seen a political pr ad or campaign on TV, radio, or print..and I live in Dallas
 
Scapegoat? They pay off a political party to refuse most all sane gun restrictions that the American people want, when polled. They go on a public relations campaign in force every time a shooting happens.

That's exactly what we want them to do. What's why NRA members PAY them every month and that's why you're reading support for the NRA from the pro gun crowd in the War Room.
 
I've never seen a political pr ad or campaign on TV, radio, or print..and I live in Dallas

Here in WA, a liberal state, I have seen many tv and radio ads.

That's exactly what we want them to do. What's why NRA members PAY them every month and that's why you're reading support for the NRA from the pro gun crowd in the War Room.

Their members, the individuals at least, think their money goes towards gun education and safety, not to public relations and bribes for politicians. Besides, the overwhelming, laughable majority of the funds that keep the nra going are from businesses. It's a political racket to keep obscene amounts of firearms pumping into American hands, no matter the context of the situation.
 
Here in WA, a liberal state, I have seen many tv and radio ads.



Their members, the individuals at least, think their money goes towards gun education and safety, not to public relations and bribes for politicians. Besides, the overwhelming, laughable majority of the funds that keep the nra going are from businesses. It's a political racket to keep obscene amounts of firearms pumping into American hands, no matter the context of the situation.
I lived in Vancouver Wa for 8 years. I was there when kip Kinkel shot his parents and then went to school to shoot that up. I was pretty heavy into politics at that point in life and I don't recall and big push by the NRA after that.
 
not saying it didn't happen, just nothing of note
 
The NRA actively blocks the ATF from getting computers. I'm not kidding! The ATF is stuck using paper files and microfiche. They're using 20th century tech in a digital world.



They had to move files out into shipping containers on the grounds because it was going to cause the upper floors to collapse.

PATHETIC.
 
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