The Columbus Dispatch

US majority still backs stricter gun laws

- By Lisa Marie Pane and Emily Swanson

WASHINGTON — A majority of Americans favor stricter gun laws, and most believe that places of worship and schools have become less safe over the past two decades, according to a new poll conducted by The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The survey was conducted both before and after this month’s mass shooting at two mosques in New Zealand. It found that 67 percent of Americans support making U.S. gun laws stricter, while 22 percent say they should be left as they are and 10 percent think they should be made less strict.

The New Zealand attack on March 15 did not appear to have an impact on Americans’ support for new gun laws; support for tighter gun laws was the same in interviews conducted before and after the attack.

Although a majority of Americans have consistent­ly said they support stronger gun laws, proposals have stalled repeatedly in Congress in recent years, a marked contrast to New Zealand and some other countries, such as Australia, that have acted swiftly after a mass shooting. Less than a week after the mosque shootings, New Zealand moved to ban “military style” semi-automatic weapons and high-capacity magazines; similarly, after a mass shooting in 1996, Australia enacted sweeping gun bans within two weeks.

The new poll suggests that many Americans would support similar measures, but there’s a wide gulf between Democrats and Republican­s on banning specific types of guns. Overall, 6 in 10 Americans support a ban on AR-15 rifles and similar semiautoma­tic weapons. Roughly 8 in 10 Democrats, but just about 4 in 10 Republican­s, support that policy.

Republican­s are also far less likely than Democrats to think that making it harder to buy a gun would prevent mass shootings: 36 percent compared with 81 percent. Overall, 58 percent of Americans think it would.

Still, some gun restrictio­ns get wide support across party lines.

Wide shares of both Democrats and Republican­s support a requiremen­t for a universal background check. They also favor allowing courts to prevent some people from buying guns if they are considered dangerous to themselves or others, even if they have not committed crimes.

Overall support for stricter gun laws is unchanged since an AP-NORC poll conducted one year ago, a month after the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 people killed.

The post-parkland poll marked an increase in support for stricter gun laws, from 61 percent in October 2017.

But the strength of that support appears to have ebbed. The percentage who say gun laws should be made much stricter, rather than just somewhat stricter, drifted down slightly after reaching a peak in the post-parkland poll, from 45 percent then to 39 percent now.

The poll showed a wide share of Americans say safety in churches, synagogues, mosques and other places of worship has worsened over the past two decades. Sixtyone percent say religious houses have grown less safe over the past two decades. More said so after the New Zealand shooting than before: 64 percent compared with 57 percent.

Nearly 7 in 10 believe elementary and high schools have become less safe than they used to be. And 57 percent say the same about colleges and universiti­es.

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