Protesters hold up signs advocating for abortion access during a reproductive rights rally in front of the Statehouse in Montpelier in May. A University of New Hampshire poll found that 75% of Vermonters said they support a proposed constitutional amendment protecting abortion rights. File photo by Natalie Williams/VTDigger

A proposed constitutional amendment protecting abortion rights in Vermont could see a landslide victory in November, according to a new poll released Thursday evening.

The University of New Hampshire survey, commissioned by WCAX, found that 75% of respondents said they would support the measure, known as Proposal 5 or Article 22. Just 18% said they would vote against it and 6% said they were still unsure.

The amendment, which has been approved by the Vermont House and Senate twice over four years, would guarantee โ€œan individualโ€™s right to personal reproductive autonomy.โ€ If approved by a majority of voters in November, it would become part of the Vermont Constitution. 

Support for the amendment varied by political party, the poll found, with 94% of Democrats backing it and 56% of independents. Republicans were divided, with 41% supporting it and 45% opposing it. 

Only 45% of the voters polled said they fully understood the amendmentโ€™s wording, though another 43% said they understood it โ€œsomewhat well.โ€

The text- and web-based poll, conducted from Sept. 29 to Oct. 3, surveyed 765 Vermont residents above the age of 18. The margin of error was 3.5%. 

The survey also covered other issues, such as gun control, law enforcement and safe injection sites.

Asked about Vermontโ€™s gun laws, 47% said they should be stricter, while 35% said they should remain unchanged and 15% said they should be less strict. Among gun owners, 35% said they wanted stricter laws, 41% said they should stay the same and 21% said they should be more lenient.

More than a quarter of respondents said they had little or no trust in their local law enforcement. 42% of voters said they had some faith and 31% said they had a lot of trust in local police.

Republicans, older Vermonters, those from central and southern Vermont and those who identify as white โ€œhave considerably more trust in their local law enforcement,โ€ the University of New Hampshire pollsters found. 

The poll only broke out racial demographics into two categories: โ€œcaucasian/whiteโ€ and โ€œother races/ethnicities.โ€ While only 9% of those who identified as caucasian/white said they had no trust in local law enforcement, 41% of those who identified as a member of other races/ethnicities said they had no trust in local police. 

Respondentsโ€™ trust in law enforcement increased with age. Only 8% of those 18-34 said they trusted police โ€œa lot.โ€ That amount doubled in the 35-49 category, rose to 42% among those 50-64 and landed at 54% among those 65 and older. 

The survey found a close divide on whether to open safe injection sites, where people would be able to use illicit drugs under supervision to combat fatal overdoses. 44% would support such sites, while 40% would oppose them. Another 9% said they were neutral and 7% said they werenโ€™t sure.

Two-thirds of Democrats said they would support opening such sites, but two-thirds of independents and 85% of Republicans said they would oppose them.