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Gun Poll: Men, women differ widely in gun control poll

WASHINGTON (AP) - The fight over gun control reflects a battle of the
sexes. American women say stricter weapon laws would curb violence while
men want better enforcement of existing laws, an Associated Press poll
finds.
The poll notes some erosion of overall support for tougher gun laws
since the days immediately following the deadly school shootings last
April in Colorado, but still offers plenty of ammunition to both sides of
the debate in a divided Congress.
The telephone survey by
ICR of Media, Pa., found 56 percent of
American adults favored stricter gun laws and 39 percent opposed.
Sixty-six percent of women favored the tougher laws, compared with 45
percent of men. Thirty percent of women and 49 percent of men were opposed.
"Women have the mother instinct and don't want guns around,"
said James Rowe, a 73-year-old semi-retired contractor and gun enthusiast
from San Diego.
In mid-April, just before the Colorado shootings, 55 percent of adults
favored tougher gun laws. When the question was repeated in an AP poll a
week after the shootings, the proportion jumped to 63 percent.
But while a majority favors stricter gun laws, only 43 percent in the
latest poll said new laws would be more effective in reducing gun violence
than better enforcement of existing laws. Those numbers are statistically
unchanged from the poll taken before the shootings, but represent a sharp
shift in opinion as measured in the post-shooting poll, when 51 percent
chose tougher gun laws and 39 percent picked better enforcement of
existing laws.
Public opinion on this question is fluid, evidenced by the shifts in
the AP polls.
Republicans have found divisions in their own ranks. The Senate, with
the help of some Republicans, agreed to legislation that requires
background checks at all gun shows, outlaws importation of large-capacity
ammunition clips and requires the sale of safety locks with handguns.
House Republicans initially stripped out that language, but later asked
for a compromise version that would require background checks for firearms
sales at gun shows.
Theresa
Flippin, a 24-year-old factory worker from Yellville, Ark.,
believes people should be able to own guns and use them for hunting. But
she wants tougher gun restrictions on people who have criminal records.
"In the last five years, it's really gotten out of control,"
she said, "the school shootings, the drive-by shootings, the
road-rage shootings."
More than half of Americans say recent shootings in the news have made
them worry more about their own safety. Almost two-thirds of women said
they were likely to feel that way.
"I worry about my daughter when she goes to school," said
47-year-old Karen Cloud, a nurse from Lexington, Ky. Several women in the
poll, when asked in interviews later how recent violence affects them,
mentioned school shootings first.
Ms. Cloud said she wasn't surprised there is a gender gap on the gun
control issue.
"I think a lot of men are just fascinated with guns and want to
have them," she said. "I dated a guy who insisted that I learn
how to shoot this rifle. It was so heavy, I couldn't even hold it. I went
out and shot cans with it, but there was no point."
The poll of 1,026 people taken Aug. 27-31 indicated that blacks were
far more likely than whites, by 83 percent to 52 percent, to support
tougher gun controls. The poll had an error margin of plus or minus 3
percentage points, larger for subgroups like men and women. Democrats were
far more likely than Republicans to support more restrictions, by 71
percent to 43 percent.
Both Democratic candidates for president, Vice President Al Gore and
former New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley, have suggested stringent steps to
control access to guns. GOP front-runner George W. Bush, the governor of
Texas, said recently that he agrees with some gun control steps, such as
raising the age of gun ownership to 21 and banning large ammunition clips.
More than half the men interviewed in the poll, 54 percent, said they
felt that recent shootings in the news were random acts of violence that
don't affect them personally, while 41 percent said they felt threatened.
Some of that may be attributed to the difference in how men and women view
guns.
"I hate to see all the shootings," said Rowe, the San Diego
contractor. "I have guns of my own, about 18 guns, rifles, pistols
...
"I just like to look at them," said the World War II veteran.
"I buy them just like a woman would buy a diamond."
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