Trump grew up in one of the most anti firearms states.
It really shouldn't surprise anyone
Has anyone checked Twitter to see where he is on this subject today.
That's only 1 of the things he said
Are we going to completely make judgments based on what a politician
says, or what a politician
does?
They
all "support the Second Amendment...", so there's no difference between them? Which ones actually introduce and vote for obvious infringements?
Obama SAID "If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor, and if you like your plan, you can keep your plan". What did he actually
do?
Here's another one of the many articles speculating (no one
knows for sure) that Trump said what he said with a particular strategy in mind.
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2018/03/its_sweetness_and_light_between_nra_and_trump_after_he_chummed_the_water_on_gun_control.htmlIt's sweetness and light between NRA and Trump after he chummed the water on gun controlExcerpt:
When President Trump made his startling comment during bipartisan televised White House gun discussions about taking guns first and due process later, I suspected he was doing the same thing he had done during similar immigration discussions a few weeks earlier. He likes to toss out ideas and let them be debated.
He heartens his opponents, and because they are so emotionally driven, they overreach, and he comes across looking reasonable while they look extreme.
His proposal for a deal, when it comes, seems reasonable to the public.
This is "unpresidential" behavior because in the previously existing culture of politics, a president must not speak until all the implications and ramifications of an idea have been researched and buttoned down.
But for President Trump, being unpresidential is not bug. It is a feature.
.....
His critics insist that President Trump is childish, unpresidential, and unreliable. And they keep getting outsmarted. Go figure.