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Gun Rights Group Attacks Ohio Republican, Another Group Stands Firm With Him

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In the high-stakes arena of Ohio politics, where the May 5 primary looms like a loaded chamber, Republican state Senate candidate Gary Click is catching friendly fire from an unexpected quarter: a gun rights group. Buckeye Firearms Association has unleashed a torrent of criticism, slamming Click for what they see as insufficient zeal in defending Second Amendment sanctuaries. It’s a classic case of purity tests gone wild—Click, a solid conservative with a track record of pushing pro-gun legislation like constitutional carry expansions, dared to vote against a blanket Second Amendment sanctuary declaration in 2021. That move, he argued, was more symbolic posturing than substantive protection, preferring targeted bills that actually shield Ohioans from federal overreach. Now, BFA’s backlash has them urging voters to sit out or switch sides, turning what should be a slam-dunk GOP hold into a litmus test brawl.

But here’s the clever twist: another heavyweight, the National Rifle Association, is standing rock-solid with Click, endorsing him as a proven fighter for 2A freedoms. This intra-family feud exposes the fault lines in the gun rights movement—grassroots purists demanding absolutist gestures versus pragmatic warriors who prioritize winnable battles. Click’s stance isn’t betrayal; it’s battle-hardened realism. Ohio’s sanctuary push, while fiery rhetoric, lacks teeth without court-tested enforcement mechanisms, risking backlash that could embolden anti-gun Dems. The NRA gets this: they’ve poured resources into Click because he delivers votes on permitless carry (signed into law last year) and preempts local gun bans, real wins that keep magazines full and rights intact.

For the 2A community, the implications are a wake-up call. Infighting like this fractures unity at a time when ATF rule grabs and Biden’s executive orders threaten everywhere. If purists sink Click, they hand the seat to a squishier alternative or worse, a Democrat, diluting Ohio’s pro-gun momentum. Voters, don’t chase shadows—back the fighter who’s racked up victories. This primary isn’t just about one man; it’s a referendum on whether gun rights groups build coalitions or burn bridges. Come May 5, the smart money’s on Click, with NRA muscle proving that strategy trumps symbolism every time. Stay vigilant, Second Amendment fam—divided we fall, united we reload.

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