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MISFIRE by Tim Mak

MISFIRE

Inside the Downfall of the NRA

by Tim Mak

Pub Date: Nov. 2nd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5247-4645-2
Publisher: Dutton

Muckraking exposé of the National Rifle Association, revealed as sleazy and insular in its zero-sum political gamesmanship.

With measured glee, Mak, Washington investigative reporter for NPR, unearths the inside story of upheavals within the once-secretive gun rights organization, arguing that its corrosive effect on American politics (particularly during the Trump administration) is matched only by internal cynicism, greed, and incompetence. These qualities are embodied by unflattering portraits of Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre and his Machiavellian wife, Susan, both of whom “had for years tapped the NRA for personal gain.” The author notes that LaPierre’s craven responses to spiraling crises, including connections to Russian election interference, led many former allies to cooperate with investigators and his reporting. LaPierre oversaw the organization’s movement from a traditional focus on hunting and firearm safety to immersion in the far-right culture wars, abetted by lobbying and legal firms that developed covert, lucrative relationships with LaPierre’s circle. This led the organization to go all-in with support for Trump’s 2016 campaign; his surprise victory positioned the NRA at the center of power. “Yet in the fall of 2019,” writes Mak, “everything was falling apart.” The NRA had spent political capital sabotaging bipartisan legislation supporting background checks after the Sandy Hook massacre. Then the story emerged of Maria Butina, a Russian agent who developed cozy relationships with key NRA figures. “The NRA repeatedly opened doors for Butina,” writes the author. By the time a New Yorker article “blew the lid off the corruption inside the gun organization,” the NRA was in open conflict, with multiple lawsuits going back and forth and LaPierre’s control threatened. Mak captures the shrill absurdity of this soap opera, managing a colorful rogues’ gallery, including the since-convicted Butina, Oliver North, and various wealthy, unsavory insiders competing for influence over the “remarkably weak-willed” LaPierre.

Valuable documentation of the malfeasance underlying the NRA’s outsized influence on American life.