There are 15 major contenders for the Republican presidential nomination. Together, they own at least 40 guns.
Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is up to 12 now, including an AR-15 assault weapon that he has talked about using if law and order ever breaks down in his neighbourhood. Former Texas Governor Rick Perry has a gun for jogging.
Nearly every Republican candidate is broadly opposed to new limits on the purchase or use of guns. With the exception of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie those who have been rated by the National Rifle Association range from A-plus all the way down to ... A-minus. Eleven of them are scheduled to appear next month at the NRA's annual conference.
The near-unanimity on the issue underscores the status of guns in modern-day conservatism. Even for those who don't own them, they are a bellwether of individual liberty, a symbol of what big government wants and shouldn't have. As the 2016 campaign gets going, guns and hunting will inevitably be part of its political theatre. Recall Mitt Romney, who, eager to demonstrate his affection for hunting, once described his targets as "small, small, uh . . . varmints, if you will."
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas has a .357 Magnum revolver and a Beretta Silver Pigeon II shotgun. In 2013, Cruz had the shotgun flown up to Iowa, to go pheasant hunting. Reporters and cameras were not far behind. In Wisconsin, Governor Scott Walker didn't grow up hunting. Now he hunts deer, pheasant and ducks. Walker posted a selfie on Twitter in 2013 from his deer stand.