Letter to Credit Card Company CEOs - Hawley Blasts Visa, MasterCard, AmEx for Plans to Track Gun Purchases

Letter

Date: Sept. 13, 2022
Location: Washington, DC

Dear Mr. Kelly, Mr. Miebach, and Mr. Squeri:

I write to express serious concern with your decision to separately categorize gun-related purchases from other retail transactions made with your payment cards so that firearm purchases can be more easily tracked. This move has been described by multiple media outlets as "a major win for gun control advocates," and they are not wrong. This new system is ripe for abuse and brings to mind similar policies of Big Tech companies and payment processors that have targeted law-abiding Americans for engaging in constitutionally protected activities. I urge you to immediately reverse course.

Too often, companies have abused their market power to target the constitutional rights of conservatives and others with minority viewpoints. Big Tech companies systematically deplatformed those who sought to discuss the efficacy of masks and vaccines or raise concerns about the integrity of our elections. The crowdfunding platform GoFundMe blocked donations to the Canadian "Freedom Rally" trucker convoy. And WePay, a payment processor subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase--the largest bank in the United States--refused to do business with Missouri conservatives seeking to host an event with Donald Trump, Jr. Your proposal to track firearm-related purchases further threatens Americans who are simply exercising their constitutional rights.

The Second Amendment is clear: the right of the people to keep and bear arms is guaranteed to law-abiding citizens and "shall not be infringed." Whether this infringement is by the federal government or powerful corporations seeking to ostracize citizens for exercising their rights, I will oppose all attempts to undermine the Second Amendment's protections.

Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and other payment card companies should not distinguish lawful firearm-related purchases from other retail purchases. Americans have had enough of massive companies using their market power to drive ordinary people out of the public square. These practices must end.

I look forward to your response.

Sincerely,


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