Gun Control Support Muffled
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Public
Doubts Effectiveness of Passing Tougher Laws
53
percent say the best way to reduce gun violence is simply to enforce the laws already in
place. Forty percent favor creating new, stricter laws, or both.
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Analysis
By Dalia Sussman
ABC News.com
April 5
Americans are broadly dubious that gun control would
substantially reduce gun violence, or that creating new gun laws is a better idea than
simply enforcing existing ones doubts that combine to make the issue something of a
political misfire.
Nearly
one-third of Americans do favor stricter gun laws, a number thats held roughly
stable for the last decade. But people are not making the issue a top priority: Gun
control ranks ninth of 15 issues they call very important in their
presidential vote.
The reason, an ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll suggests, is
that many people dont think such laws will deliver results. Just a quarter think
stricter gun control laws would reduce gun violence a lot, down a tad from 30
percent last fall. And nearly half, 48 percent, dont think such laws would have any
effect on gun violence at all.
New vs. Old
Indeed, 53 percent say the best
way to reduce gun violence is simply to enforce the laws already in place. Forty percent
favor creating new, stricter laws, or both. There are some differences among
groups. Republicans, gun owners and men heavily favor enforcing existing laws rather than
passing new ones, while Democrats, non-gun owners and women are divided about evenly on
the question.
Partisanship is the biggest divider:
Just 44 percent of Republicans support any gun control at all, compared to 61 percent of
Democrats.
Campaign 2000
The presidential candidates
mirror this difference in the parties. Democrat Al Gore has called for a host of new laws
to control gun violence, while Republican George W. Bush has urged stronger enforcement of
existing laws.
But Americans do not show much of a preference for either
candidate on the issue. Asked whom they trust more to handle gun control, 55 percent say
Bush, 31 percent Gore. (Gore has lost ground here on this issue.)
Methodology
This ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll was
conducted by telephone March 30-April 2 among a random national sample of 1,083 adults.
The results have a three-point error margin. Field work was conducted by TNS Intersearch
of Horsham, Pa.
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