Politics & Government
Sununu To NRA: Less Whining, More Winning
"We can yell and scream all we want, but we want winners for tomorrow," Sununu told the crowd.

Addressing the National Rifle Associationβs annual meeting in Indianapolis Friday, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu kept his remarks short and sweet: There is no substitute for winning.
βWe can yell and scream all we want, but we want winners for tomorrow,β Sununu told the crowd.
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βAt the end of the day, we have to ask if we are going to sit back and whine. Or are we going to get it done. Letβs get it done,β Sununu added.
Sununu was part of a cattle call of announced and potential 2024 Republican candidates, including former President Donald Trump and former VP Mike Pence, making their pitch to the pro-Second-Amendment organization. He used the opportunity to highlight his actions as governor on gun rights and call out βother Republicans that I respect very much, but they cave under pressure when it comes to the Second Amendment.β
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βWhat is that about?β Sununu asked.
While the New Hampshire governor is often described as a moderate Republican from a purple state, he has a reputation even among far-Right critics as a strong defender of gun rights.
Kimberly Morin, who heads the Womenβs Defense League of New Hampshire, is a conservative activist who isnβt hesitant to criticize Sununu from the right. But she admits, βSununu has been very good on the Second Amendment.β
Sununu, whoβs known for off the cuff comments and spoke Friday without notes, mocked the presence of teleprompters at the lectern. βAre these teleprompters, who uses teleprompters? I mean, really,β Sununu quipped.
Sununu got a warm response from the NRA crowd when he recounted his decision to back a law last year barring state and local law enforcement from enforcing federal firearms statutes.
βWe saw [what Biden was doing]. He may not remember it, but we do. He starts threatening executive orders. Heβs just going to do executive orders to complicate firearms [rights] and limit them in all sorts of ways. We passed a law in New Hampshire that says if you are the federal government, we are the states. βShove it. We are not doing it. We are not doing it.'β
Like some of his fellow speakers, like South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, Sununu has been cagey about his 2024 plans. Heβs openly discussed entering the race but hasnβt made a commitment.
Sununu also took a swipe at Trump β though without naming himβ referencing a comment the then-president made in the wake of the mass shooting in Parkland, Fla.
βI remember a prominent Republican a couple years ago, and I think he said, βwe need to take the guns away first. Take them away early,β he said. What is that about?β
Trumpβs exact comment at a 2018 White House meeting on gun violence was:
βOr, Mike, take the firearms first and then go to court, because thatβs another system. Because a lot of times, by the time you go to court, it takes so long to go to court, to get the due process procedures. I like taking the guns early. Like in this crazy manβs case that just took place in Florida, he had a lot of firearms β they saw everything β to go to court would have taken a long time, so you could do exactly what youβre saying, but take the guns first, go through due process second.β
Throughout the speech, Sununuβs trademark energy and optimism were on display, along with his repeated evocations of New Hampshireβs state motto.
βMy message? Think big. Think positive,β Sununu said. βHow do you grow or inspire? How do we get excited about the opportunity to create for tomorrow? Not the law, not the imposing regulation, not [penalizing] businesses. How do we get excited about opportunities?β
βWhat is at the heart of all that?β Sununu added. βA little bit of live free or die. That is what it is.β
Sununuβs NRA speech can be viewed via CSPAN here.
This story was originally published by the NH Journal, an online news publication dedicated to providing fair, unbiased reporting on, and analysis of, political news of interest to New Hampshire. For more stories from the NH Journal, visit NHJournal.com.