The Columbus Dispatch

Gun-law views follow party lines

- By Lisa Marie Pane and Emily Swanson

ATLANTA — The slaying of five dozen people in Las Vegas did little to change Americans’ opinions about gun laws.

The nation is closely divided on whether restrictin­g firearms would reduce such mass shootings or homicides, though a majority favor tighter laws, as they have for several years, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The survey was conducted Oct. 12-16, about two weeks after 64-year-old Stephen Paddock fired on a crowded musical festival across the street from his hotel room, killing 58 and wounding about 500 people before killing

himself. It’s the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

In this latest survey, 61 percent said the country’s gun laws should be tougher, while 27 percent would rather see them remain the same and 11 percent want them to be less strict. That’s similar to the results of an AP-GfK poll in July 2016.

Nearly 9 in 10 Democrats, but just a third of Republican­s, want to see gun laws made stricter.

Kenny Garcia, a 31-year-old resident of Stockton, California, and a former gun owner, said he’s torn about whether tighter gun laws would lead to a reduction in mass shootings.

“That’s the hard part,” Garcia said. “How do you control something like that when you have no idea where it’s coming from, whether you control the guns or not?”

Still, he’s frustrated by the easy availabili­ty of some devices — such as the “bump stocks” used by the Las Vegas shooter to make his semiautoma­tic guns mimic the more-rapid fire of automatic weapons.

“They give people access to these things, then they question after something horrible happens, but yet the answer is right there,” he said. “It just doesn’t make sense.”

About half of Americans said they think making it more difficult to buy a gun would reduce the number of mass shootings, and slightly under half said it would reduce the number of homicides.

About half felt it would reduce the number of accidental shootings, 4 in 10 that it would reduce the number of suicides and only about a third felt it would reduce gang violence.

Alea Leonard, a 21-year-old data analyst and full-time student, said she’s torn about whether the nation’s gun laws should be more strict, in part because different parts of the country have different experience­s with crime.

“Here, I feel like everyone should be able to carry a .22(-caliber handgun) on them,” said Leonard, who lives in Orange County, California. Her neighborho­od, she said, has a high crime rate and in the five months since she moved there, a 14-year-old was shot in the back of the head.

Most of those in the survey who are younger than 30 said they believe stricter gun laws would result in fewer mass shootings, homicides and accidental shootings.

Some 59 percent voiced disapprova­l with President Donald Trump’s handling of the issue, while 40 percent said they approved. Politicall­y, 79 percent of people who identify as Republican approve of Trump’s handling of gun issues, while 61 percent of independen­ts and 89 percent of Democrats disapprove.

The AP-NORC poll of 1,054 adults was conducted using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondent­s is plus or minus 4.0 percentage points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States