13 Billboards Call Out How Much Money Politicians Got From NRA

A billboard in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, calls out Rep. Rod Blum (R-Iowa). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
A billboard in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, calls out Rep. Rod Blum (R-Iowa). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)

On the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School mass shooting in Littleton, Colorado, billboards posted on roadsides across the country let local residents know how much money their lawmakers have accepted from the National Rifle Association.

On Friday, grassroots gun reform group Survivors Empowered launched a campaign called “30 Billboards Outside Cowardly Incumbents,” inspired by the movie “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.” The group bought ad space on 13 billboards in nine states, from California to Iowa to Alabama, and are fundraising for 17 more. Each sign lists the name of a local member of Congress and how much money they’ve received from the gun lobby group.

The campaign is meant to highlight the influence of the gun lobby on lawmakers and put pressure on members of Congress to cut ties with the NRA and pass gun control legislation.

The NRA spends millions each year on lobbying and campaigns in an effort to get pro-gun lawmakers elected and gun control legislation blocked. In 2016, the NRA invested $30 million in Trump’s presidential campaign and at least $20 million in GOP Senate campaigns, according to an audit obtained by the Center for Responsive Politics.

“Many Americans really don’t understand how the NRA works and controls politicians. People ask how come they won’t stand up and do something. Well, because the NRA is in their pockets,” said Survivors Empowered founder Sandy Phillips, whose 24-year-old daughter was killed in the 2012 mass shooting in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado.

“We’re not afraid of the NRA,” she added. “What can they take from us? They’ve already taken our daughter.”

The billboard campaign launched the same day hundreds of students walked out of schools across the country to mark the anniversary of Columbine and call for legislative action on guns.

In the wake of the Parkland, Florida, school massacre and the subsequent wave of student activism, young protesters have repeatedly called out lawmakers for their ties to the NRA. Last month, the NRA lobbied against gun regulations proposed in Florida, which included raising the minimum age for firearms purchases to 21 and banning the sale of bump stocks. The legislation passed.

“There are a lot of Americans out there saying, ‘We’ve had enough and want these politicians called out,’” Phillips told HuffPost on Friday. “What’s great is these students aren’t afraid ― they’re showing better leadership than many politicians.”

The billboards were placed in congressional districts of politicians who had received what the group deemed “substantial” financial support from the NRA. The contribution figures listed on the billboards were from gun reform group Everytown for Gun Safety and represented the total donations the NRA had made to the politicians over their careers.

While the billboards had been slowly going up over the past week, the campaign officially launched Friday with candlelight vigils planned at most locations. So far the billboards have been funded to stay up for about six weeks, Phillips said, but the group hopes to raise enough to purchase more billboards and keep them up through the November midterm elections.

Billboard in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, targeting Rep. Raúl Labrador (R-Idaho). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
Billboard in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, targeting Rep. Raúl Labrador (R-Idaho). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
Billboard in Omaha on NRA contributions to Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
Billboard in Omaha on NRA contributions to Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
A billboard in Des Moines naming Rep. David Young (R-Iowa). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)
A billboard in Des Moines naming Rep. David Young (R-Iowa). (Photo: Survivors Empowered)

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Students chant outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School during the walkout.
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Students from Stuyvesant High School walk out in New York City.
Students gather outside the White House in Washington, D.C.
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Students participate in a march in support of the National School Walkout in the Queens borough of New York City. 
Students participate in a march in support of the National School Walkout in the Queens borough of New York City. 
Students from Grace Church School walk out in New York City
Students from Grace Church School walk out in New York City
Students from Grace Church School walk out in New York City.
Students from Grace Church School walk out in New York City.
Students at Philadelphia High School of Creative And Performing Arts participate in the walkout. 
Students at Philadelphia High School of Creative And Performing Arts participate in the walkout. 
Students at Wekiva High School in Apopka, Florida participate in the walkout. 
Students at Wekiva High School in Apopka, Florida participate in the walkout. 
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Students at Lane Technical High School in Chicago held signs in support of the walkout.

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.