Voters Are Nearly United in Support for Expanded Background Checks

Publish date: 2024-05-18

Along with the background check legislation, the House is also advancing legislation sponsored by House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) that would change the three-day waiting period to purchase a gun to 10 days if the Federal Bureau of Investigation has not yet completed the buyer's background check. That measure takes on the so-called “Charleston loophole,” named for the deadly mass church shooting in 2015, in which the shooter evaded measures meant to block him from purchasing a weapon.

According to the latest survey, 48 percent of voters support Clyburn’s legislation, but it garners opposition from 38 percent of voters – driven by nearly half of Republicans. 

The survey was conducted March 6-8 among 1,990 registered voters, with a margin of error of 2 percentage points.

The coronavirus pandemic and its closures of public spaces contributed to a sharp decline in mass killings last year, which in turn took gun policy off the political front burner for most of the 2020 election cycle. Democrats on Capitol Hill have a narrow advantage over their Republican counterparts on the topic, with 44 percent of voters trusting them over congressional GOP lawmakers on gun policy, while 38 percent trust Republicans more.

But that 6-point trust edge is much smaller than their advantage on the party’s top issues – including the pressing COVID-19 pandemic and the growing threat of climate change. Biden’s numbers are even weaker on the subject of gun policy, according to a recent Morning Consult/Politico poll: 37 percent approve of his handling and 39 percent disapprove, marking the only issue where he is underwater, in part due to a disproportionate share of Democratic voters who say they do not know or have no opinion compared with other issues.

The move on Capitol Hill -- which is not likely to move forward in the Senate as long as the chamber’s legislative filibuster remains intact -- comes after Democrats advanced legislation to address the pandemic, a subject 2 in 3 voters believe Congress should prioritize. By comparison, just 28 percent of voters said gun policy should be a “top priority,” roughly the same share who said Congress should elevate the passage of a bill to reduce inequality or provide relief to Americans with student loan debt.

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