More than seven out of 10 Americans say they are more likely to cast a ballot this November after the recent spate of mass shootings in Buffalo and Texas, a poll released Thursday found. As the midterm elections approach amid the backdrop of the national debate on guns, 72% of Americans say the shootings have motivated them to go to the polls, while only 4% say the shootings have made them less likely to do so, according to a NPR/Marist poll.And 84% of Democrats, 66% of independents and 65% of Republicans cite the massacres at a supermarket in Buffalo and an elementary school in Uvalde where a total of 31 people were killed as a motivating factor.
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