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A Colorado Cub Scout has been kicked out of his den after asking a state senator tough questions about the current political landscape in America.

Eleven-year-old Ames Mayfield said he was “heartbroken” after he was told he’d have to find a new den because he confronted state Sen. Vicki Marble over her stance on gun control.

“I’m really heartbroken that my den leader, which I felt I had a pretty good relationship with, decided to kick me out,” he told NBC Denver affiliate, 9 News. “I’m a big fan of Cub Scouts, and I think it’s one of my favorite things to do.”

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Lori Mayfield filmed a video of her son’s exchange with Marble, a Republican, at a Cub Scout event in Denver last week. In the video, the fifth grader confidently reads his typed questions while Marble listens.

“Why on earth would you want someone who beats their wife to have access to a gun?” he asks.

“Why on earth would you want someone who beats their wife to have access to a gun?”

Later he says, “There’s something wrong in our country where Republicans believe it’s a right to own a gun, but a privilege to have health care.”

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Lori Mayfield told 9 News that she knows critics will assume she was using her son to try to score political points, but insisted that the research and questions all came from Ames.

“I don’t think any child should be banned from coming back for asking tough questions,” she said. “There were kids who asked about fracking, about the border wall, about fossil fuels — in the mix of that, it didn’t seem like gun control was that different.”

In an e-mail to The Denver Post, Marble said she didn't take issue with Mayfield's questions.

"I don't blame the boy for asking the questions, since I believe there was an element of manipulation involved, and it wasn't much different from the questions I normally field in other meetings," she said. "The invitation to meet with the scouts was never intended to cause friction and controversy."

Marble has not replied to NBC News' request for comment.

Related: Boy Scouts Chief Apologizes for Trump Political Comments

Mayfield said the Scout's pack leader told her that her son would not be welcomed back into the den days after the exchange with the senator. She said the Scouts have offered to place him in other dens, but they don’t work with the family’s schedule.

In a statement shared with NBC News, the Boy Scouts of America and the local Denver council said that they are committed to working with the Mayfields to find a den that “will allow him to continue his Scouting experience in a way that fits his and his family’s needs.”

After the incident became public, Ames has received support on social media, including a tweet from Gabrielle Giffords, the former Arizona congresswoman, who praised his courage.

“Ames, call me in 14 years. I’ll campaign for you,” she wrote.

This is exactly the kind of courage we need in Congress. Ames, call me in 14 years. I’ll campaign for you. https://t.co/fdE4DinnRk — Gabrielle Giffords (@GabbyGiffords) October 19, 2017

For his part, Ames said he isn’t sure he’d be interested in returning to the den after the incident.

“I was a big fan of the den originally, but now since I know consequences and stuff and how they view things, I was concerned, so no," he said. "I don’t really want to get back in."