Jim, that's just a tiny bit misleading. The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, combined, stated about $8.8 million in total revenue for 2006, the last year for which they've released an annual report. And these don't include their PAC, a separate entity, the National Handgun Control Voter Education Fund.
Not that I don't agree with you that the NRA is larger...and hopefully will stay that way.
I think this has been posted not too long ago, but in the spirit of "know your enemy":
The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence
Headquarters: 1225 Eye Street, N.W., Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 898-0792 Fax: (202) 371-9615
Communications Fax: (202) 682-4462
http://www.bradycampaign.org
http://www.handguncontrol.org
Regional Offices: 10951 W. Pico Boulevard, Suite 204
Los Angeles, CA 90064
(213) 446-0056 Fax: (310) 475-3147
268 Bush Street, Box 555
San Francisco, CA 94108
(415) 433-3535 Fax: (415) 433-3357
705 12th Avenue
San Diego, CA 92101
(619) 557-0100 Fax: (619) 233-6682
11 South LaSalle Street, Suite 2302
Chicago, IL 60603
(312) 920-0504 Fax: (312) 920-0807
Staff: 32
Founding Chair: Nelson T. "Pete" Shields, III
Chair: Sarah Brady
President: Michael Barnes
Treasurer: Mark Ingram
Secretary: Lois Hess
Board of Directors:
David Birenbaum
Carl Bogus
John Corderman
Lee Fisher
Larry Lowenstein
John Phillips
Helen Raiser
Maurice Rosenblatt
Jeanne Shields
Odile Stern
Edward O. Welles
Publication: Washington Report, quarterly
PAC: National Handgun Control Voter Education Fund
Membership: 250,000 dues-paying members. HCI claims 1,000,000+ members, but this includes contacts by interested parties by any means.
In 2001, Handgun Control, Inc. changed its name to Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. The organization originated (1974) as the National Council to Control Handguns (NCCH), a group which lobbied for government restrictions on the right to keep and bear arms through support for restrictions on the manufacture, importation, sale, transfer, and civilian possession of handguns. The organization voiced a desire for an eventual handgun ban through gradual steps, but changed its name and espoused goals due to results of a survey. In 1991, then HCI amended its Articles of Incorporation to reflect its support of restrictions on rifles and shotguns as well.
In 2001, BCPGV absorbed the financially strapped "Million Mom March" (MMM) organization. MMM is a chapter-based organization formed in 1999 as a reaction to the shooting at the Jewish Community Center in suburban Los Angeles. Their stated goal is to win passage of "gun laws, including: (1) licensing of handgun owners, (2) registration of handguns, (3) creating consumer product safety standards for guns, (4) closing the "gun show loophole," and (5) limiting gun purchases to no more than one a month." They staged a march in Washington, D.C. On Mothers Day 2000 and have continued to build a national organization. The founder, Donna Dees-Thomases is a close friend of Bill and Hillary Clinton.
BCPGV National Committee:
Lauren Bacall
Marjorie Benton
Ellen Burstyn
Jackie Cooper
Joseph Curran
Stephan Dart
William Dorman
Gerald Dunfey
Kenneth Gibson
Rabbi Jos. B. Glaser
Betsy Gotbaum
Michael Gross
Elliot Jones Halberstam
Mariette Hartley
Richard Hatcher
Janet Gray Hayes
Andrew Heiskell
Hal Holbrook
Maynard Jackson
Albert Jenner, Jr.
Shirley Knight
Patricia Kennedy Lawford
Edward Levi
John Lindsay
Marsha Mason
Jane McMichael
Patrick Murphy
Paul Newman
George D. Newton, Jr.
Victor Palmeri
Russell Peterson
Sol Price
Milton Rector
Will Rogers, Jr.
James W. Rouse
Rabbi Alexander M. Schindler
Neil Simon
Dr. Emanuel Taney
Eli Wallach
Ruth Warrick
Francis Wheat
James Whitmore
Andy Williams