When US President Barack Obama mentioned last week that he had picked up a new hobby — skeet shooting at Camp David — it was a surprising disclosure by a president whose main identification with guns these days is his effort to ban assault rifles and high-capacity magazines.
To some, Obama’s newfound enthusiasm for shooting clay pigeons — he said in an interview that he did it “all the time” at his retreat in the Maryland mountains — also seemed a bit suspicious.
So on Saturday, the White House tried to silence the skeptics by releasing a photo of Obama shooting on the range at Camp David in August last. In the photo, the president, wearing protective glasses and ear-muffs, is squinting down the barrel of a gun, moments after pulling the trigger.
Smoke shoots out of the front of the gun. The White House said the photo was taken on August 4, which was Obama’s 51st birthday. But it offered no further details on whether his target practice was a regular hobby or a one-time event.
The notion of the president taking aim at targets flung into the air captivated some in the political and social media world at a time when he is pushing Congress to enact sweeping restrictions on high-capacity rifles and magazines.
Conservatives scoffed, comics mocked, a Congresswoman challenged him to a skeet-shooting contest, a fake picture of an armed Obama circulated on the Internet, and the White House tried to make the whole matter go away.
Obama is hardly the first politician to draw scorn for boasting of experience with guns. In 2007, during his first presidential campaign, former governor Mitt Romney of Massachusetts was ridiculed when he said, “I’ve always been a rodent and rabbit hunter - small varmints, if you will.” In 2004, John Kerry, then a presidential candidate and now secretary of state, was lampooned for showing up in camouflage to go hunting less than two weeks before the election.
The latest commotion has its origins in the interview Obama gave to The New Republic, now owned by Chris Hughes, a Facebook co-founder and former Obama campaign aide. During the interview, Franklin Foer, the editor, referred to the fight over gun control and asked the president if he had ever fired a gun.
“Yes, in fact, up at Camp David, we do skeet shooting all the time,” Obama said.
“The whole family?” Foer asked.
“Not the girls,” he said, “but oftentimes guests of mine go up there. And I have a profound respect for the traditions of hunting that trace back in this country for generations. And I think those who dismiss that out of hand make a big mistake.”
Obama went on to say that the reality of guns in urban areas differs from that in rural areas. “So it’s trying to bridge those gaps that I think is going to be part of the biggest task over the next several months,” he said. “And that means that advocates of gun control have to do a little more listening than they do sometimes.”