2016 Maine Question 3

Question 3: Citizen Initiative
An Act To Require Background Checks for Gun Sales
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 366,770 48.20%
No 394,157 51.80%
Valid votes 760,927 98.60%
Invalid or blank votes 10,781 1.40%
Total votes 771,708 100.00%

Results by county

No

  70–80%
  60–70%
  50–60%

Yes

  60–70%
  50–60%

Maine Question 3, formally An Act to Require Background Checks for Gun Sales,[1] was a citizen-initiated referendum question that appeared on the Maine November 8, 2016 statewide ballot. It sought to require a background check for virtually all gun transfers in Maine, with some exceptions. As the Maine Legislature and Governor Paul LePage declined to enact the proposal as written, it appeared on the ballot along with elections for President of the United States, Maine's two United States House seats, the Maine Legislature, other statewide ballot questions, and various local elections.

The question was defeated, with 51.8% of voters opposed.


2016 Maine Question 3

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