After Newtown, Americans want their guns with some restrictions (Reuters)
Thu Dec 27, 2012 6:29pm EST
(Reuters) – Nearly seven in 10 Americans support the idea of placing strong or moderate limits gun ownership following the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, a Reuters/Ipsos poll said on Thursday.
But laws that permit citizens to carry concealed weapons or use lethal force for protection while in public were just as popular, the poll said.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll, which surveyed 1,477 Americans online between December 23 and 27, highlighted the difficulty U.S. policymakers face in devising ways to curb gun violence: gun control laws enjoy fervent support in the abstract, but laws preserving specific gun ownership privileges are also well liked.
The poll results come roughly two weeks after police say 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, using a semi-automatic weapon to kill 20 first graders and six school staff members. Ahead of the rampage, he had killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, in their home five miles away. Lanza killed himself as police arrived at the school.
It was the second deadliest school shooting in U.S. history after the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia, which left 32 dead.
The Reuters/Ipsos survey found that 48 percent of respondents agreed that “gun ownership should have strong regulations or restrictions.” Meanwhile, 69 percent and 68 percent either strongly supported or somewhat supported laws allowing law-abiding citizens to get a concealed-weapon permit and “laws allowing citizens to use deadly force to protect themselves from danger in public places,” respectively.
Some restrictions on gun ownership enjoyed even more support than concealed carry rights. Nearly nine in 10 Americans favored laws requiring background checks before someone purchases a gun, and just over seven in 10 favored limits on the number of guns someone could purchase in a particular time frame.
But nearly four in 10 Americans said they supported allowing law-abiding citizens to bring a firearm into a “church, workplace, or retail establishment,” according to the poll. Several states currently ban guns in such places.
An equal number said they were “very concerned” about increased purchases of semi-automatic weapons following the shooting in Connecticut, further illustrating the dissonance.
The latest poll results echoed attitudes expressed by Americans surveyed immediately after the Newtown massacre and differed sharply from Reuters/Ipsos polls conducted prior to it. The share of Americans supporting strong limits on gun ownership rose by 8 percentage points to 50 percent in the days after the shooting.
The poll’s findings had a credibility interval, which is similar to a margin of error, of plus or minus 2.9 percentage points.
(Editing by Dan Burns and David Gregorio)
Poll Watch: PPP/Daily Kos/SEIU (D) Survey on Gun Control
PPP/Daily Kos/SEIU (D) Poll on Gun Control
Would you support or oppose requiring a criminal background check before any purchase of a gun?
- Support 92%
- Oppose 6%
Would you support or oppose requiring a mental health examination before any purchase of a gun?
- Support 63%
- Oppose 28%
Would you support or oppose banning assault weapons?
- Support 63%
- Oppose 32%
Would you support or oppose banning the sale of guns and bullets over the Internet?
- Support 69%
- Oppose 26%
Would you support or oppose closing the so-called ‘gun-show loophole,’ which allows unlicensed dealers to sell guns at gun shows without performing criminal background checks?
- Support 76%
- Oppose 19%
Would you support or oppose prohibiting felons convicted of violent crimes from purchasing guns?
- Support 94%
- Oppose 5%
Would you support or oppose banning high-capacity magazines on guns – magazines capable of holding more than ten bullets?
- Support 64%
- Oppose 31%
Do you think assault weapons are necessary for hunting, or not?
- They are necessary 18%
- They are not 76%
Are you more or less interested in owning a gun today than you were before last week’s shooting in Connecticut, or has there been no change in your level of interest?
- More interested 22%
- Less interested 30%
- No change 47%
Do you think the answer to gun-related violence is more widespread gun ownership or tighter restrictions on gun ownership?
- More widespread gun ownership 32%
- Tighter restrictions on gun ownership 48%
Do you think the guns are a necessary check on government tyranny, or not?
- They are a necessary check on tyranny 39%
- They are not 40%
Survey of 1,000 registered voters was conducted December 18-19, 2012. The margin of error is +/- 3.1 percentage points. Party ID: 37% Democrat; 32% Republican; 31% Independent/Other. Political views:43% Moderate; 39% Conservative; 18% Liberal.