The percentage of Americans in favor of tighter laws around guns sales has risen sharply, according to new polling by Gallup.
The new polling shows 55% of respondents agree that laws regarding the sale of guns should be stricter — a spike of 8 points from last year.
The polling data was collected between Oct. 7 and 11, just days after the shooting at Umpqua Community College in Oregon that killed nine people and wounded nine others.
Gallup found that support for stricter gun laws was at one of its highest points in 2013, the year after the Sandy Hook shooting in Connecticut. Americans at that time favored stricter gun laws by 58%, but this quickly dropped to 49% the following year.
The poll found that support for stricter gun laws rose among almost every group. Both gun owners and non-owners increased their support for stricter laws by 6 and 7%, respectively. Independents had the highest increase of 11%, jumping from only 45% in support of stricter laws to 56%.
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Republicans were the only group to decrease their support for laws that are “more strict than now,” dropping from 29 to 27%.









