Washington
(AFP) - Americans support stricter gun laws by a more-than two-to-one margin,
one of the highest levels on record, a polling agency reported Tuesday one week
after the latest US school shooting left 17 people dead.
The tragedy
at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida has shocked many
Americans, inspired students to launch campaigns to reduce gun violence, and
put Congress and President Donald Trump's administration in the spotlight as
they consider what changes, if any, should be made to the country's gun laws.
Voters
support tightening gun laws by 66 to 31 percent, according to Quinnipiac
University's national poll, which described the margin as "the highest
level of support" since it began surveys on the question in 2008.
The poll
also found that a majority of gun owners, 50 percent to 44 percent, backed
stricter gun laws, and that their support specifically for universal background
checks rose to an overwhelming 97 percent, against just three percent who
opposed such checks or expressed no opinion.
"If
you think Americans are largely unmoved by the mass shootings, you should think
again," Quinnipiac poll assistant director Tim Malloy said in a statement.
"Support
for stricter gun laws is up 19 points in little more than two years," he
added, referring to December 2015 poll data that showed 47 percent of voters
supported tightening such laws.
When broken
down by political party, however, the latest results show that just 34 percent
of Republicans support stricter gun laws, compared with 86 percent of
Democrats.
Trump
signaled support Monday for a bipartisan effort to expand and improve a
national system of background checks for gun purchases in the wake of the
Florida school shooting.
Several
legislative proposals were introduced after a shooter killed 20 children and
six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in 2012, including a
ban on semi-automatic weapons like the one used last week in Florida, banning
high-capacity magazines of over 10 bullets and a universal background check
bill.
None has
made it into law.
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