The Monitor could find no recorded evidence of the president ever handling, never mind firing, a gun. He has never posed with them, 脿 la former presidential candidate John Kerry, for campaigning purposes. He is not a member of the National Rifle Association.
Instead, perceptions of Obama's attitude toward guns have been shaped by a comment that he made at a 2008 fundraiser in San Francisco, saying that small town Pennsylvanians are "bitter" and "cling to guns or religion ... to explain their frustrations." During an Illinois Senate campaign, he also gave answers to a questionnaire that suggested he supported a ban on handguns. (Obama later said a staffer filled in the questionnaire erroneously.)
Unlike Obama, there is a record of Romney handling guns. But an early campaign narrative of him as an avid sportsman a decade ago was eventually watered down to acknowledge that the Michigan native鈥檚 hunting experience boils down to a few 鈥渧armint鈥 shooting expeditions.
鈥淚'm not a big-game hunter," Romney subsequently said.
鈥淟eave it to Mitt Romney to shoot himself in the foot with a gun he doesn't own," Boston Globe columnist Joan Vennochi chuckled at the time.
After proclaiming that his views don鈥檛 completely align with the NRA, Romney became a lifetime member of the organization in 2006.