Community Corner
Quinnipiac Poll Shows Broad Support For Gun Controls
The poll by Quinnipiac University shows voters support a ban on assault weapons and that even gun owners are split on the issue of weapons control.

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By margins of 2-1 or more, Connecticut voters support most including universal background checks (93β6 percent), a new Quinnipiac University poll released today shows.
Voters support stricter statewide gun-control laws, 66β30 percent, the independent poll finds. The poll shows support for specific measures including:
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- 68β28 percent back expanding the statewide ban on the sale of assault weapons. Gun owners are opposed 49β44 percent
- 68β28 percent back a ban on the sale of ammunition magazines with more than 10 rounds. Gun owners are divided 49β48 percent
- 72β27 percent back registration of all handguns, with annual renewal.Β Gun owners are divided with 48 percent in favor and 50 percent opposed
- 63 β 31 percent, including 50β46 percent among gun owners, favor limiting handgun purchases to one per month
- 85β14 percent, including 71β28 percent among gun owners, back a permit requirement to purchase and carry all guns
- 86β11 percent, including 85β12 percent among gun owners, favor a gun offender registry for those convicted of gun crimes;
- 76β19 percent, including 65β32 percent among gun owners, back stricter gun storage requirements;
- 50β43 percent back mandatory liability insurance for gun owners
βIn the wake of the Newtown tragedy, there is overwhelming support among Connecticut voters for strengthening the stateβs gun laws,β said Douglas Schwartz, PhD, director of the Quinnipiac University poll.
βIt is remarkable how bipartisan the support is for some of the most talked-about gun-control measures.Β Universal background checks tops the list with 93 percent support, higher than weβve ever seen for any issue in 20 years of Connecticut surveys.β
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βInterestingly, Republican voters are divided 45β48 percent on the general question, βDo you support or oppose stricter gun-control laws in Connecticut.βΒ They support, however, most of the specific measures,β Schwartz added.
The Newtown tragedy makes them more likely to support gun-control, 54 percent of Connecticut voters say, while 43 percent say it makes no difference.
Voters are divided on a proposal to prohibit people convicted of drunk driving from owning guns, with 45 percent in favor and 48 percent opposed.
Voters also are divided on a proposed ban on children under 18 playing violent point-and-shoot video games in public arcades, with 46 percent in favor and 48 percent opposed.
Voters do support 54β41 percent placing armed police officers in public schools in the state.Β
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