This is true, but I think there are two factors which qualify this argument:
1) leverage / scale (a person with a gun can kill more people in a shorter space of time)
2) it is contended whether or not this is killing someone, whereas noone (probably, almost) contends whether a school shooting is killing anyone
Even with large numbers of people thinking abortion is murder, this is overwhelmed by the number of people thinking that shooting someone is murder. Since murder is considered (probably) by a similarly large majority, and a gun can create more murder than an abortion, you could make a far stronger public interest case for CC companies to apply pressure to one rather than the other.
There are 664,435 reported abortions in 2013, compared to about 33760 firearms homicides. There is a scale difference but not in the direction you anticipated.
While that's surprising, that doesn't quite contradict my point: a firearm has greater leverage.
The main point is that while almost everyone will agree that murder of humans is undesirable, not everyone will agree that abortion is murder (_even_ in the United States), which means that it is not categorically clear that the outcome of abortion is a negative one, while it is clear that the outcome of a shooting is a negative one, and therefore there is a stronger public interest case in applying commercial pressure to sales.