President-Elect Trump Pushes for National Concealed Carry Reciprocity
- Donald Trump has vowed to enact "concealed carry reciprocity" legislation if he wins a second term.
- In 2017, House Republicans approved the Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act, but it failed in the Senate.
- Everytown for Gun Safety criticized Trump’s commitment to the concealed carry policy during his campaign.
23 Articles
23 Articles


Trump’s victory over Harris proves ‘Second Amendment won,’ gun rights groups say
close Video The ‘Second Amendment won’ with Trump’s election victory, gun rights advocate says Aidan Johnston, the director of federal affairs for Gun Owners of America, speaks to Fox News Digital about Donald Trump’s election victory. Supporters of the Second Amendment will have a strong ally in the White House with President-elect Donald Trump following years of pressure from the Biden administration, firearms rights advocates say. Or…
Trump's victory over Harris proves 'Second Amendment won,' gun rights groups say
The "American people clearly elected a pro-gun presidential ticket" in President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance, one gun rights advocate tells Fox News Digital.
Donald Trump Considers National Concealed Carry Reciprocity
Reciprocity is a good step toward constitutional carry, and it’s most likely the best first step because some states will fight any gun rights tooth and nail. But, as Trump said last year, “Your second amendment does not end at the state line."
Trump National Concealed Carry Reciprocity Promise Resurfaces
U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson, (R-NC), who has continued to reintroduce his concealed carry reciprocity bill that originally died back in 2018, has won reelection and is seeking a second term as National Republican Congressional Committee Chair. Should the GOP win the House, it is likely Hudson's reciprocity could once again pass that body in 2025.
Trump's gun declaration shows his absurd hypocrisy on states' rights
Trump had no specific gun policy on his campaign website during the election cycle, but announcing this policy before he takes office shows its priority—and that it’s something he didn’t want to inform voters about before they voted. Sneaky.
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