Virginia LG scheduled to speak at NRA fundraising event in Texas this week

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears is scheduled to be the keynote speaker on Friday for a women’s luncheon at the National Rifle Association’s annual conference in Houston, just days after a deadly mass shooting at a Texas elementary school and another at a Buffalo grocery store pushed guns to the forefront of American politics.

Tickets to the event with Earle-Sears, who famously posed with a military-style rifle during her 2021 campaign, range from $250 to $2,500, according to the NRA’s website.

“Be part of this unforgettable gathering of like-minded women as we celebrate the sisterhood we share, hear from impactful speakers, participate in live and silent auctions, and raise funds essential to strengthening the NRA’s fight to protect our freedom,” the NRA’s Women’s Leadership Forum says on a website promoting the event.

On Wednesday, the Democratic Party of Virginia called on Earle-Sears to withdraw from the event in light of the shooting at Uvalde’s Robb Elementary School that left at least 19 children and two adults dead.

“Virginians should be in disbelief that our lt. governor would speak at an NRA event after an unconscionable elementary school shooting that left 19 children dead,” DPVA spokesman Gianni Snidle said in a news release that also called on Earle-Sears to denounce the NRA.

She sent out the following tweet the same day as the massacre in Texas:

Gun issues weren’t a major focus for Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s winning campaign last year, though Youngkin has said he supports gun rights. Former Gov. Terry McAuilffe, who ran against Youngkin, campaigned on renewing a push for an assault weapon ban in Virginia, but the Republican wins last year made the proposal even more of a longshot than it already was.

Youngkin, who sidestepped an endorsement from the NRA last year even as the organization endorsed Earle-Sears and Attorney General Jason Miyares, ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in Virginia in response to the Texas shooting.

“Suzanne and I are devastated at the incomprehensible and tragic news out of Texas,” Youngkin said on Twitter Tuesday night. “We are praying for the community of Uvalde and the families who lost their children and loved ones to this senseless attack.”

Amid a broad increase in shootings playing out in numerous Virginia cities, both Republicans and Democrats have proposed millions in new funding to reduce the type of everyday gun violence that helped push Virginia’s 2020 homicide rate to a 20-year high. The exact scope of that proposal is still being worked as part of the budget deal that will be unveiled soon ahead of a scheduled vote next week.

(Editor’s Note: This article was edited and published with permission by Virginia Mercury.)

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