The number of Americans who live in a household with at least one gun is declining.
Only 32% of Americans said they either own a gun or live with a person who does, tying with the record low set in 2010, according to the latest General Social Survey (GSS). During the late 1970s and early 1980s, about half of Americans said they lived in a household with a firearm.
Twenty-two percent of Americans said they own a firearm, down from a high of 31% who answered similarly in 1985.
The GSS noted key factors for the decline in household and personal gun ownership, including the decreasing popularity in hunting, end of the military draft, increase in single-parent homes headed by women and aging of the current gun-owning population — primarily white males. Fewer women than men own guns, the survey found.
Half of Republicans live in households with at least one gun, a figure twice as high as ownership among Democrats or independents.
The survey was published as the National Rifle Association (NRA) is backing legislation in at least 15 states that would force colleges and universities to allow people to carry concealed, loaded guns on campus. Nineteen states have introduced legislation that allows guns in K-12 schools.
RELATED: GOP lawmaker: Arm ‘hot little girls’ to stop college sex assault









