Parkland students brand firearm ban during Pence speech as NRA hypocrisy

The move triggered ardent criticism against the NRA.

"Due to the attendance of the Vice President of the United States, the U.S. Secret Service will be responsible for event security at the...Leadership Forum," the NRA said in a statement. "As a result, firearms and firearm accessories, knives or weapons of any kind will be prohibited in the forum prior to and during his attendance."

While it's a Secret Service security protocol, the move triggered criticism of the NRA from their loudest opponents of late — students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and their families.

Cameron Kasky, one of the most outspoken survivors of the Parkland. Fla., shooting, immediately ripped into the NRA for becoming what he said was "a hilarious parody of itself."

Matt Deitsch, an organizer of the March for Our Lives, replied to Kasky’s tweet by bashing the gun lobby for wanting to "protect people who help them sell guns, not kids."

Fred Guttenberg, father of Jaime Guttenberg, one of the 17 people murdered on Feb. 14, also went after the NRA.

"According to the NRA, we should want everyone to have weapons when we are in public," he wrote. "But when they put on a convention, the weapons are a concern?"

He added, "I wish my daughter and others murdered by guns had the same protection."

NRA spokeswoman Dana Loesch took to Twitter to lambaste the news media for mischaracterizing the NRA’s role in prohibiting weapons in Pence’s presence.

Jennifer Baker, an NRA spokesperson, reiterated to ABC News that this is "standard protocol" for an event featuring the vice president. Attendees are "not under NRA jurisdiction" during Pence's speech, she said. "This is the Secret Service."

Stoneman Douglas student David Hogg responded Sunday by posting a link to a MoveOn.org petition calling for the vice president to cancel his speech entirely, which is set for Friday. The petition has 45,739 signatures towards it 50,000 goal.

Trump met with NRA officials at the White House twice in less than a week following the Parkland massacre, and about a week after the attack on the Florida high school, Trump called the NRA leadership "great people and great American patriots" on Twitter.

Alex Wind, a Marjory Stoneman student and a founding member of the Never Again movement, responded to reports that the president also will speak at the NRA meeting.

On Twitter, the high school junior delivered a warning directly to the president: "There truly are no words anymore for the way you have handled this situation. The people are watching. The people will soon be voting. Don’t be on the wrong side of history."

The NRA-ILA Leadership Forum will begin Thursday in Dallas, Texas.