Washington
state support for gun control measure strong before vote
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[October 30, 2014]
By Victoria Cavaliere
SEATTLE (Reuters) - A ballot measure to
tighten background checks for gun buyers in Washington state, which is
reeling from a deadly school shooting last week, was drawing strong
support ahead of a Nov. 4 vote, a poll showed on Wednesday.
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Washington state voters are deciding on two competing gun
legislation measures in next week's election.
One would require background checks on all gun sales, including at
gun shows, online and transfers. The other would prevent the state
from imposing more background check requirements unless the federal
government does so first.
The vote comes in the shadow of last week's school shooting in
Marysville, Washington, in which a teenager used a .40 caliber
handgun to shoot five classmates at Marysville-Pilchuck High School.
Two 14-year-old girls were killed in addition to the gunman, who
took his own life, authorities said.
A KCTS-9 survey taken from Oct. 17 to 24, the day of the shooting,
found voter support for the background check measure at 64 percent.
The survey found 45 percent of those polled would vote against new
background checks.
A separate Oct. 9 survey conducted by independent Washington
pollster Stuart Elway, found the gun control measure with 60 percent
support with its rival at 39 percent.
Public support for stricter gun control often spikes after a mass
shooting, said Matt Barreto, a University of Washington political
science professor.
"If you piece together all of the shootings going all the way back
to Columbine, nationally we've been seeing more support for
background checks and more responsible gun laws," Barreto said.
Pro-gun groups argue that tighter background checks wouldn't have
prevented the Marysville tragedy nor impeded the shooter, who at 15
was too young to legally obtain a gun.
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"I think it's deceptive to suggest that a law like this is going to
prevent something like what happened at Pilchuck high school," said
Dave Workman, a spokesman for the measure to block more background
checks.
Gun control advocates say stricter checks would reduce gun violence
by making it harder for criminals to obtain firearms.
Nicole Hockley and Mark Barden, who both lost first-grade sons in a
2012 shooting rampage in Sandy Hook, Connecticut, came to Seattle to
encourage residents to vote for stricter checks.
"We know that background checks can save lives," Hockley said. "Just
because it won't stop one tragedy doesn't mean it won't stop other
tragedies from happening."
(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Walsh)
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