By RACHEL LA CORTE and GENE JOHNSON
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Voters on Tuesday approved expanding background checks on gun sales and transfers in Washington state, a measure supporters said would help keep guns out of dangerous hands and make it easier for police to track weapons used in crimes.
Initiative 594 was one of two rival gun measures on Tuesday’s ballot. It requires background checks on all sales and transfers, including private transactions and many loans and gifts. It had especially strong support in King County.
“It’s the first time in the country that by a vote of the people we’ve closed the background check loophole,” I-594 campaign manager Zach Silk said. “When elected officials couldn’t stand up to the gun lobby, the people did.”
The rival measure, Initiative 591, would prevent the state from expanding checks beyond what’s called for in federal law. It was trailing statewide. Gun-rights activist Alan Gottlieb acknowledged Tuesday night that his campaign had a lot of ground to make up.
Like federal law, Washington law requires checks for sales or transfers by licensed dealers but not for purchases from private sellers, like those who sell at gun shows or to friends.
The expansion measure was designed to close that loophole. The measure has exceptions for emergency gun transfers concerning personal safety, gifts between family members, antiques, and loans for hunting.
But Gottlieb and others criticized it as unworkable, saying it contained no exemption for temporary gun transfers. He said he was considering legal action over the expansion measure, suggesting it violated the state’s rule that initiatives must be limited to a single subject, and that he would press lawmakers to make changes.
Silk said he was confident the measure could withstand any constitutional scrutiny, but that the I-594 campaign was open to working on potential legislative fixes if there are any problems with its interpretation.
Recent polling showed a significant advantage for the expansion measure — which also had an advantage in fundraising. If both managed to pass, officials said, the courts or the Legislature would likely have to sort it out.
Lisa Fain, 41, of Mercer Island, said she was interested in the gun background check issue.
“What happened in Marysville was very unfortunate. If there’s a silver lining, it’s perhaps that people realize we need stronger gun laws,” said Fain, referring to the deadly shooting last month at Marysville-Pilchuck High School.
Karen Smith, 40, of Bellevue, voted against the expansion and for the anti-expansion measure and called the decision very complicated.
“Guns are big in our family. We want to make sure everybody has the right to have a gun safely,” Smith said.
No other state had a gun-related measure on the ballot this year, and millions of dollars poured into Washington, mostly in support of expanding background checks.
Supporters of expansion have raised more than $10.3 million, with large donations from several prominent proponents like Bill and Melinda
Gates and Paul Allen, a Microsoft co-founder.
Everytown for Gun Safety, a group funded by former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, donated more than $1 million to the campaign and has spent nearly $1 million more through its own political action committee. Bloomberg has separately donated an additional $285,000.
The National Rifle Association raised nearly half a million dollars to fight the expansion measure, but did not endorse I-591, which spent just over a million dollars on its campaign.
Six states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Rhode Island — plus Washington, D.C., require universal background checks for all sales and transfers of firearms, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Other states have varying laws on expansion beyond what federal law requires, including Oregon, which requires a background check for purchases at gun shows.
Both measures started out as initiatives to the Legislature. Lawmakers didn’t take action, but under state law, the measures were guaranteed a place on the statewide ballot.
The FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System processed more than 560,000 firearm background checks in Washington state last year, and has processed more than 346,000 between January and the end of September of this year, according the system’s online report.
Supporters of expansion have said that the increase in the number of background checks if the measure passes is hard to predict, since the size of the private market in the state is unknown.
However, state officials have estimated that checks for private sales and transfers would increase by 13,440 through July of next year.
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Associated Press writer Donna Gordon Blankinship contributed to this report.
