A growing number of companies have cut ties with the National Rifle Association amid calls for a boycott of businesses linked to the US gun lobby after the Florida school shooting.
United and Delta airlines joined car rental giants Hertz and Enterprise in ending discounts for NRA members.
The murder of 17 people has prompted renewed calls for tighter gun controls.
Florida Republican Governor Rick Scott has backed calls to raise the minimum age for buying a gun from 18 to 21.
Mr Scott has been widely seen as an ally of the NRA who has previously opposed stricter laws in the state. However, he has come under mounting pressure to respond to the demands of students who survived the shootings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
How did the boycott come about?
Activists have tried to put pressure on the NRA since the shooting by targeting firms that offer discounts and other benefits to its members.
They have flooded its corporate partners with comments on social media under the hashtag #BoycottNRA.
Firms under pressure include delivery company FedEx and tech giants such as Amazon, which distributes NRA television programmes.
Which companies have cut NRA ties?
On Thursday, the family-owned First National Bank of Omaha said it would not renew NRA-branded credit cards, citing “customer feedback”.
Enterprise Holdings, which owns the rental car brands Alamo, Enterprise and National, also said discounts offered to NRA members would end on 26 March.
The firm, which announced the move in response to comments on Twitter, declined to say why it had taken such a step but told a customer that the firm doesn’t “sponsor, endorse or take a political stance on any organizations.”
Other companies distanced themselves from the NRA on Friday and Saturday.
Those included MetLife Insurance, the Avis Budget Group, home security firm Simplisafe, two moving brands – Allied Van Lines and northAmerican Van Lines– and Symantec Corp which had offered discounts for its LifeLock identity theft product.
Insurance firm Chubb also said it had stopped underwriting an NRA-branded insurance policy three months ago.
Delta Air Lines and United followed suit on Saturday, saying that they would ask the NRA to remove their information from its website. Both airlines had been offering special flight discounts to NRA members travelling to the association’s annual meeting in May.
In Florida, the president of the Florida Education Association, which represents teachers’ unions, also called on the state to look at pension holdings in gun companies in a statement to the Miami Herald newspaper.
What has the NRA said?
The NRA, which claims five million members, did not respond to a request for comment about the effect of the boycott.
The group defended itself in comments on Twitter, saying people upset about the shooting should focus on lapses by law enforcement.
“Instead of placing the blame on an organization that defends everyone’s #2A rights, maybe people should take a hard look at the number of failures by the FBI and local law enforcement agencies, or does that not fit your agenda?” it wrote, referring to the constitutional amendment that protects gun rights.
NRA chief executive Wayne LaPierre spoke out on Thursday, arguing that “opportunists” were using the 14 February tragedy to expand gun control and abolish US gun rights.
“They hate the NRA. They hate the second amendment. They hate individual freedom,” he said.
Prior campaigns aimed at the NRA have had limited results.
President Donald Trump has defended the NRA, while others criticised the boycott on Twitter.
What about gun purchases?
On Friday, the governor of Florida urged state lawmakers to restrict access to firearms for young people and the mentally ill.
Rick Scott said his aim was for Florida to “require all individuals purchasing firearms to be 21 or older,” adding that the he wanted to make it “virtually impossible” for anyone with mental health issues to acquire a gun.
Mr Trump earlier said he supported the proposal to raise the age at which a person can buy a gun from 18, and said he believed the NRA would back such a proposal.
“I don’t think I’ll be going up against them,” Mr Trump said of the gun lobby. “They’re good people.”
In other developments:
- It has emerged that an unidentified woman called the FBI on 5 January to say she was worried that Nikolas Cruz, the suspected gunman, would get into a school, “shooting the place up”. The woman said the information had already been passed to police and she had not heard back
- Police have released previous recordings of 911 calls reportedly made by Nikolas Cruz,, in which he says that someone he was living with at the time was “going to gut me”
- President Trump said an armed officer stationed at the school who did not enter the building where the shooting was taking place was a “coward”
- CNN reports that in addition to the armed officer, three Broward County deputies were waiting outside the school doing nothing to confront the shooter when Coral Springs police arrived
What other issues are attracting boycotts?
The campaign comes as US businesses increasingly find themselves entangled in political debates, as activists target them on issues such as LGBTQ rights, as well as ties to the president.
Companies such as retailer Nordstrom and sportswear brand Under Armour are among the firms that have been subject to calls for boycotts from the left and right.
Executives serving on presidential councils, including the former chief executive of Uber, have resigned from the advisory groups after consumer pressure. The councils eventually disbanded last summer.
North Carolina last year also rescinded a law that restricted bathrooms for transgender people after a boycott by businesses and sports leagues.
Source: bbc.co.uk
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