Vice President Kamala Harris revealed she owns a Glock handgun while sharing a bit of information about where she goes to make sure her aim is steady.
Harris divulged the information in an interview on CBS '60 Minutes,' when correspondent Bill Whitaker asked her about a matter she has addressed only in brief in other settings.
'I have a Glock, and I've had it for quite some time. And – I mean, look, Bill, my background is in law enforcement,' she told him.
Whitaker asked Harris, a former California prosecutor who served as the state's AG, whether she had ever fired the weapon.
'Yes,' she responded, laughing. 'Of course I have. At a shooting range. Yes, of course I have.'
She got asked about her gun after mentioning it in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. Harris, who had a liberal voting in the Senate and has been a strong supporter of gun control, indicated a willingness to use the weapon to defend her home.
'If someone breaks in my house, they’re getting shot,' she told Winfrey.
Armed: Vice President Kamala Harris told 60 Minutes she owns a Glock handgun
She had mentioned her gun ownership before, but many supporters were surprised to learn about it. She did not reveal more about what type of weapon she owned. She said previously she kept it for personal safety.
Harris also joked about the sensitivity of the issue almost as soon as she made the comment to Winfrey.
She said she 'probably should not have said that,' then quipped, 'My staff will deal with that later.'
Harris got asked what type of gun she owns, after recently telling Oprah Winfrey she would use it if someone broke into her home
'If someone breaks in my house, they’re getting shot,' she told Winfrey last month
The Glock is commonly issued by law enforcement agencies
The Glock, manufactured in Austria and the U.S., is a favorite of many police departments and law enforcement agencies.
Her revelations come at a time when rival Donald Trump is calling Harris and Democrats a threat to Second Amendment gun rights.
Both canddiartes are also in a fierce battle for support in states where support for gun rights, particularly in rural areas, runs strong.
That includes western and central Pennsylvania, where both Trump and Harris are battling for support.
Harris, like Biden, calls for reinstating the expired ban on assault-style weapons, a regulation that dates to the Clinton administration but lapsed.
As a senator, she cosponsored legislation to regulate ghost guns, ban large-capacity ammo clips, as well as bump stocks.
Back in 2005 when she was San Francisco DA, she backed a ballot proposition to bar city residents from buying, selling or possessing handguns. There were exceptions for active-duty law enforcement and military members.
President Joe Biden also occasionally speaks about how he owns a shotgun, even while repeatedly demanding the return of an assault weapons ban amid a wave of horrific mass shootings and school shootings.