The Mercury News Weekend

Gun control backed by voters.

Newsom’s initiative would force buyers of ammunition to face background checks

- By Jessica Calefati jcalefati@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SACRAMENTO — A gun control initiative placed on the November ballot by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom in the wake of several high-profile mass shootings is leading by a 2-to-1 ratio with strong support from liberals who live on the coast, a new poll shows.

Propositio­n 63 would force ammunition purchasers to undergo background checks and outlaw possession of high-capacity ammunition magazines. It would do little to impact a package of legislatio­n that Gov. Jerry Brown signed in July that already tightens rules for firearms owners. But that doesn’t seem to matter to voters.

The new Field/IGS Poll found 60 percent of likely voters surveyed the week of Sept. 7 support the initiative while

30 percent say they’re opposed. Only 10 percent reported being undecided. The poll also shows a similar share of likely voters favor Propositio­n 64, which would legalize marijuana for adult use. A poll on Wednesday from the Public Policy Institute of California also showed 60 percent of likely voters support legalizing marijuana.

Supporters of the gun control initiative applauded the poll results and said they’re proof of what Newsom has been saying since he launched the Safety for All campaign late last year: that voters deserve a chance to take on the gun lobby and endorse sensible rules that will make California­ns safer. Last week, a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll found 64 percent of voters supported the measure.

“People are ready to stand up to the National Rifle Associatio­n and take bold action to reduce gun violence,” said Dan Newman, a spokesman for the Safety for All campaign.

Gun rights advocates dismissed the poll results and warned supporters not to get too comfortabl­e, not- ing that turnout this season will be unusually tough to predict and that a ballot as crowded as the one voters must navigate in November could yield some surprises.

“The Stop 63 community will show up to stop this radical measure come rain or come shine because they know that it does nothing to stop crime and only hurts hardworkin­g, law-abiding California­ns,” said Craig DeLuz, a spokesman for the Firearms Policy Coalition, a gun advocacy group.

Most of Propositio­n 63’s support comes from Democrats, liberals and coastal county voters, the poll found. But while it shows two-thirds of GOP voters oppose the measure, it also reveals that a little more than half of residents who live in the state’s conservati­ve inland counties back it.

Along with requiring background checks for bullet sales and banning possession of high-capacity ammunition magazines, Propositio­n 63 would also force licensed vendors to report ammunition theft within 48 hours, make theft of a firearm a felony and create a new court process to ensure that firearms are surrendere­d by people upon conviction of serious crimes.

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 ?? LIPO CHING/STAFF ?? Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom placed Prop. 63 on the ballot.
LIPO CHING/STAFF Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom placed Prop. 63 on the ballot.

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