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Second Amendment

The Trump Administration Has a Conflicted Relationship with the Second Amendment

The right to bear arms is inherently anti-authoritarian at a time when Trump wields authority.

J.D. Tuccille | 2.6.2026 7:00 AM

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President Donald Trump, at odds with himself, and a revolver handgun in the middle | Illustration: Midjourney
(Illustration: Midjourney)

The Trump administration has a problem when it comes to the Second Amendment. A large part of its base consists of people who firmly believe in the right to keep and bear arms. But that right, as protected by the Second Amendment, empowers the individual and stands as a challenge to the authority of the state.

This creates an awkward situation for a president and his coterie who don't like being challenged or even criticized. That's why we see administration officials arguing in favor of self-defense rights one moment while challenging the right to keep and bear arms at another.

You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.

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Mixed Messages on Gun Rights

In December, the Trump administration sued Washington, D.C. over the city's draconian gun laws. The nation's capital bans the ownership of many semiautomatic firearms, including the widely owned AR-15 (tens of millions are in private hands nationwide).

"Today's action from the Department of Justice's new Second Amendment Section underscores our ironclad commitment to protecting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans," commented U.S. Attorney General Pamela Bondi. "Washington, DC's ban on some of America's most popular firearms is an unconstitutional infringement on the Second Amendment—living in our nation's capital should not preclude law-abiding citizens from exercising their fundamental constitutional right to keep and bear arms."

That's what you want to hear from government officials—full-throated defense of individual rights, and legal action against jurisdictions that violate liberty. But just weeks later, the Trump-appointed U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C. was singing a very different tune.

"You bring a gun into the district, you mark my words, you're going to jail," U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro told Fox News on February 2. "I don't care if you have a license in another district, and I don't care if you're a law-abiding gun owner somewhere else. You bring a gun into this district, count on going to jail, and hope you get the gun back."

The next day, Pirro doubled down on X, commenting in a video post: "Every responsible gun owner that I know makes sure that they understand the laws where they are going and understand whatever registration requirements there might be….You're responsible, you follow the laws, you're not going to have a problem with me."

But the point many gun owners correctly make is that rights supersede the law. The law should be obeyed only if it's respectful of natural rights. With its lawsuit against D.C. over the semiautomatic ban, the Trump administration already recognized that at least some of the capital's gun laws violate self-defense rights. So, why was one of its officials now threatening jail time for breaking those laws?

A Brewing Feud With Gun Owners

In fact, the Trump administration was already in trouble with gun owners after the shooting by Border Patrol agents of Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti, who was legally carrying a concealed firearm at the time of his death. Federal officials attacked Pretti as well as the right to bear arms.

"You cannot bring a firearm, loaded, with multiple magazines to any sort of protest that you want. It's that simple. You don't have a right to break the law and incite violence," FBI Director Kash Patel wrongly insisted.

"I don't like it when somebody goes into a protest and he's got a very powerful, fully loaded gun with two magazines loaded up with bullets also," complained Trump.

To Pirro and the administration, the National Association for Gun Rights snapped back, "Bureaucrats act like the 2A does not exist and brag about jailing people for exercising their rights."

"Recent events in Minnesota underscore a recurring and deeply troubling theme: Government officials and commentators treating natural rights as privileges," added the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC). "As the Declaration of Independence puts it, 'all men are created equal… endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.' We believe those rights include the rights to self-defense, freedom of speech, and to protest the government."

The FPC statement emphasizing "the rights to self-defense, freedom of speech, and to protest the government" underscored the administration's conflicted relationship with guns and the Second Amendment. In a country founded on armed revolution, the right to keep and bear arms is inextricably linked with resistance to authority. So, for that matter, is the right to free speech, which—in the form of pamphlets, articles, and public addresses—put fire in the bellies of the original revolutionaries.

Anti-Authoritarian Rights Meet an Authoritarian Administration

But the authority the current crop of protesters demonstrate against is wielded by the Trump administration. And the officials whom they might resist hold office courtesy of the current president. That spirit of criticism and rebellion doesn't sit well with a man who has asserted, "I have the right to do whatever I want as President." More recently, Trump claimed in the context of global relations that he was constrained only by "my own morality. My own mind. It's the only thing that can stop me."

That president has surrounded himself with hangers-on who flatter the boss or otherwise elevate deference to law and the powers-that-be over considerations of natural rights and of simple popular disagreement with the administration's policies. There's not much of an anti-authoritarian streak running through this (or, to be fair, any) White House.

People protesting in the streets and exercising their right to bear arms are challenging officials who believe they can do whatever they want. The guns they own and carry are an implied threat that far more potential constraint exists in the hands of the public than will ever be supplied by one politician's personal morality.

In political terms, the Trump administration must keep its base happy by, in part, supporting the individual right to keep and bear arms and working to overturn restrictions on the same. There are, certainly, some officials sincerely working towards that end.

But the right to keep and bear arms, like the right to freedom of speech, makes individuals more powerful relative to the state. It's inherently anti-authoritarian. The Trump administration, under a president who bridles at any hint of restraint on his power, is authoritarian to its core. This administration sends mixed messages about the Second Amendment because it's deeply uncomfortable with the challenge to government posed by individuals exercising their natural right to keep and bear arms.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Review: South Park Is Somehow Still Good in the Age of Hyperpoliticization

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

Second AmendmentDonald TrumpTrump AdministrationGunsGun OwnersGun RightsRights
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  1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 hours ago

    Trump's far better than Biden was or Harris would have been on woke and climate alarmism. He's an F- on economics. Guns? He cares so little about the concept of rights that trying to get any consistency from him on guns is asking the impossible. He's the principal; he don't need no stinking principles.

    Log in to Reply
  2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

    Let's see.

    Trump administration duly executes the law while seeking to change the law for the better. This isn't conflicting. It is how it is supposed to work.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 hours ago

      Oh ha ha, what a dreamer!

      The best thing about Trump is how you lick-spittle fanbois refuse to acknowledge he is even capable of lying and making mistakes. The way you twist yourself into knots to fawn over him and turn every lie and misstep into glory is worth the price of admission.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

        Yes sarc, we get it. Youre an idiot.

        You complain if he ignores the law and complain if he executed the law. This is part of your broken brain from being so wrong on economics.

        Ask yourself why you were wrong instead of raging at the world blaming everybody else for your own failures.

        You demand he be a king while accusing him of being a king like a retard loser.

        Do better sarc Jr.

        Now. Simple question for a simpleton.

        Does the President have a constitutional requirement to take care laws be faithfully executed, yes or no?

        Is the proper procedure to change laws or simply ignore the ones unlike by the current president?

        You've become such a pathetic joke in your rage sarc lite. You've even picked up sarcs addiction to be humiliated when I largely ignore your dumb ass. An uncontrollable need to respond to me so you can be humiliated again and again.

        Zero logical argumentation in your posts. So answer the two questions above if youre not a coward.

        Log in to Reply
      2. mad.casual   29 minutes ago

        The best thing about Trump is how you lick-spittle fanbois refuse to acknowledge he is even capable of lying and making mistakes.

        Still not vaccinated. By the precepts, I staked my life that he was wrong. He threw billions at a cure that doesn't work. I've never said or done anything in refute of that fact. If I have, it should be a whisper compared to everything else I've said and done at volumes appropriate for anyone who wants to hear to hear it. If he shot an actual authoritarian like Anthony "I am The Science!" Fauci dead in the middle of Time Square, I'd cheer. I'm consistently disappointed that it doesn't happen.

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    2. mad.casual   37 minutes ago

      A large part of his base opposes gun control, whom he, even if only performatively, files suits on behalf of in order to appease, while officials in his own administration argue over it? I don't think TooSilly knows the meaning of the word "authoritarian".

      Given the magazine's entrenched retardation about a/the "deep state", it makes sense that they wouldn't know or understand.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   28 minutes ago

        The suits are by far the most effective means to fix the bad laws. And he has been consistent on that point aside from one or two cases.

        Log in to Reply
        1. mad.casual   21 minutes ago

          Implied in my post on Greenhut's "Militarized Policing Caused at The Root of the Minneapolis Mayhem" article (talk about Freudian slip:
          https://reason.com/2026/02/06/militarized-policing-caused-at-the-root-of-the-minneapolis-mayhem/) the Brady Bill set the 2A and Civil Rights back 30 yrs. in this country. Trump, despite otherwise being a cookie-cutter Clinton Democrat, *still* hasn't even come close.

          More guns with higher ammo capacity on both sides of any/all arguments and, now more than ever, it's apparent that lying to people over social and web media, whether it's to stochastic martyrs or keeping people out of hospitals because "we're all in this together", is *far* more deadly.

          Log in to Reply
  3. SRG2   2 hours ago

    The obvious solution to the inevitable cognitive dissonance arising from Trump's attitude to 2A versus that of so many of his followers is for Reason (and other sources) not to write articles pointing out the cognitive dissonance...

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

      See stg. You've basically also becime shrike.

      What i find hilarious about this article especially is that I mentioned this suit in jacobs thread blaming trump for what Pirro said.

      You blame trump for another's words, then cant figure out what his inherent actions actually are.

      Log in to Reply
  4. Use the Schwartz   10 minutes ago

    “In many cases, I probably identify more as Democrat.”

    -- Donald Trump

    While on the surface Trump's shifting 2A stances seem like a legit attack vector for Dems, it will only highlight their own failures wrt 2A. 2A advocates already know that Trump is not reliable (failed bump stock ban) but we also know that he's 1,000,000,000 times better than the best Dem on the 2A.

    TL;DR Everything any given Dem says about the 2A is bullshit, while only a quarter of what Trump says about the 2A is bullshit.

    Log in to Reply
  5. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   4 minutes ago

    Tuccille is a steaming pile of TDS-addled lying shit. ain't he?

    "In fact, the Trump administration was already in trouble with gun owners after the shooting by Border Patrol agents of Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti, who was legally carrying a concealed firearm at the time of his death."

    Let's see, we have a well-armed, lefty activist interfering with LEOs during an arrest who seems to think there are no consequences for 'stupid' and finds out otherwise.
    And Trump is 'in trouble'.

    Get fucked with a barb-wire-wrapped baseball bat, asswipe.

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