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National Rifle Association (NRA) spokeswoman Dana Loesch addresses the crowd at Thursday’s Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbour, MD.Alex Wong

The United States' largest privately-owned bank holding company will stop producing credit cards for the National Rifle Association in response to customer feedback, a spokesman said on Thursday.

The Nebraska-based First National Bank of Omaha will not renew its contract to issue the group's NRA Visa Card, spokesman Kevin Langin said in a statement.

"Customer feedback has caused us to review our relationship with the NRA," Mr. Langin said.

Mr. Langin declined to say when the contract would expire and would not elaborate on what sort of feedback the company had received. The company released the same statement dozens of times on Twitter in response to other users who called on the company to sever its ties with the NRA. Some users who identified themselves as customers pledged to take their business elsewhere.

The announcement came after the progressive news website ThinkProgress listed the bank as a company that supports the NRA. ThinkProgress noted that First National Bank offered two NRA cards, each with a US$40 bonus, and touted it as "enough to reimburse your one-year NRA membership!"

On Thursday, the bank website that advertised the NRA card had been disabled. A cached version of the site touted the card as "the official credit card of the NRA" and noted the benefits of membership.

The NRA credit cards are part of a larger business in which the bank issues cards branded with organizations' logos, such as the sporting-goods store Scheels and the Best Western hotel chain.

The NRA has faced intense criticism following the school shooting in Parkland, Fla. that left 17 people dead, the latest in a string of high-profile mass killings in the United States.

An NRA spokeswoman referred questions on Thursday to the group's licensing department. A phone message left with that office was not immediately returned.

First National Bank has banks in Nebraska, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota and Texas.

Students across the United States stage walkouts demanding a change in gun control laws.

Reuters

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