Does Concealed Carry Make Society Safer? Americans Have Decided
By ANDREW MALCOLM
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
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First, how would you answer this question?
If you said "safer," you'd be in the clear majority, according to a new Gallup survey of 1,015 adults.
Fully 56% said the country would be safer if more trained citizens were armed; 41% disagreed.
As you might expect, men favored the idea more: 62% said safer to 37% less safe. But now even 50% of women agree society would be safer, while 45% disagree.
Location of residence had some effect, but perhaps not as much as you might expect. Small town and rural residents felt more concealed carry would be safer, 63% to 33%. Suburban residents voted safer too, 52% to 47%. Big city residents broke closest, 50% safer to 47% less so.
Majorities of almost every age group also said safer — 66% of young people 18 to 29, 56% ages 30 to 49, 51% of those 50 to 64 and 50% of those older.
Three-out-of-four gun owners (74%) said safer, while 48% of non-gun owners agreed.
Almost every education demographic said safer — 57% to 40% among high school graduates, those with some college education broke 65% to 31% and college graduates said safer, 56% to 43%.
Only those with post-graduate degrees saw less safety in wider concealed carry, 35% safer to 54% less safe.
The largest disagreement came in breakdowns by political party. Republicans felt concealed-carry made life safer, 82% to 16%. Independents were 59% safer to 39%.
And Democrats, who lead the most recent congressional bids for additional gun controls, were the most opposed to wider concealed-carry even with background checks and training, 31% safer to 67% less safe.
Despite defeats in Congress two years ago, the Gallup survey conducted 10 days ago found an overwhelming majority of Americans — 86% — favored background checks on all gun purchasers, to only 12% opposed and 2% who claimed not to know.
But 53% said background checks would have little (22%) or no effect (31%) on reducing the number of mass shootings in the country. Nineteen percent said such a law would have a great effect and 28% said a moderate effect.
A previous Gallup poll found the largest sector, 48%, placed a great deal of blame for the shootings on failings of the country's mental health system. Those blaming easy access to firearms dropped from 46% to 40%.
Andrew Malcolm is IBD's national politics columnist. Follow him @AHMalcolm.
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