CNN host Piers Morgan issued one last plea for U.S. gun control as he wrapped up his show's three-year run.
Morgan devoted
the prime-time show's final minutes Friday night to the issue that he
said has been a "consistent and often very controversial" part of "Piers
Morgan Live."
The
British-born host cited gun violence statistics and expressed dismay
that mass shootings including those at an elementary school in Newtown,
Connecticut, and movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, haven't led to
stricter laws.
Morgan blamed
politicians that he said had been bullied into "cowardly" silence by a
gun lobby led by the National Rifle Association.
A message seeking comment from the NRA was left Friday night with an answering service at its headquarters.
Morgan concluded with remarks addressed to his critics.
"To
those who claim my gun control campaign has been anti-American, well,
the reverse is true. I'm so pro-American I want more of you to stay
alive," he said, adding, "Now it's down to you."
In
2011, he succeeded longtime CNN host Larry King in the 9 p.m. Eastern
time slot, but drew increasingly paltry ratings. He has said that CNN's
audience tired of hearing a Brit weigh in on American cultural issues.
Last
fall, the already struggling "Piers Morgan Live" faced increased
competition from a revised Fox News Channel lineup that included a
strong new performer opposite Morgan with Megyn Kelly's "The Kelly
File."
When the show's end was
announced last month, Morgan said he was in discussions with CNN
regarding a new role. The channel said then that his future was
undetermined.
Morgan served as
editor of The Daily Mirror from 1995 to 2004. He has been questioned in
connection with Britain's long-running phone hacking scandal, which has
led to numerous arrests, resignations and the closure of Rupert
Murdoch's News of the World tabloid.
In
February, Morgan confirmed that he was interviewed in December by
British police investigating the illegal interception of telephone
voice-mails. Morgan, who said he had given a previous witness statement,
has consistently denied wrongdoing.
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