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| The NRA shut down production on its live television channel NRATV at the same time its top lobbyist resigned (AFP Photo/KAREN BLEIER) |
Washington (AFP) - The most powerful US gun-owners organization shuttered its online television channel on Wednesday amid increasing internal power struggles and waning public influence.
The
National Rifle Association closed down live programming on its channel NRATV,
which has been criticized even within the group for its ultra right-wing
language.
NRATV
notably sparked controversy in September when Dana Loesch -- the channel's main
presenter and the NRA's no-holds-barred spokeswoman -- criticized the
children's cartoon "Thomas & Friends" for adding more diverse
characters.
To
illustrate the point, Loesch showed images of the show's anthropomorphized
train characters drawn wearing Ku Klux Klan hoods.
The end of
NRATV is "a victory for every American who wants to see less incendiary,
hate-fueled rhetoric taking up space in the media landscape," said
Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun control advocacy nonprofit.
"The
shutting down of the NRATV is just another sign that the NRA is in a state of
crisis and the gun safety movement is stronger than it's ever been," the
organization added in a thread on Twitter.
The
channel's closing down is linked to a bitter spat between the NRA and its
advertising agency Ackerman McQueen. The NRA has filed a lawsuit against the
agency, complaining of unjustified billings.
Additionally,
the NRA's top lobbyist Chris Cox, who was seen as a potential successor to the
group's longtime CEO Wayne LaPierre, resigned Wednesday, further adding to the
group's unrest.
Cox was
accused of participating in an internal attempt to unseat LaPierre, according
to media reports.
In April,
NRA president Oliver North, who took over the position only last year, decided
not to seek a second term. In a letter to the NRA's executive committee, North
accused LaPierre of using group funds for personal purchases.
North said
that his efforts to fight alleged financial mismanagement in the NRA had led to
his ouster.
The
leadership struggle has played out in public view at a time when the NRA --
which has long played an outsized role in the gun debate in America -- has
faced mounting political, regulatory and financial challenges.
Firearms
claimed more than 36,000 lives in the United States in 2018.

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