From California, with its counterculture heritage, to the fishing ports
and mill towns of Maine, millions of Americans in nine states have a
chance to vote Nov. 8 on expanding legal access to marijuana.
Collectively, the ballot measures amount to the closest the U.S. has
come to a national referendum on the drug.
Five states — Arizona, California, Maine, Massachusetts and Nevada —
will consider legalizing the recreational use of pot. Three others —
Florida, Arkansas and North Dakota
— will decide whether to permit marijuana for medical purposes. Montana
will weigh whether to ease restrictions on an existing medical
marijuana law.
As the most populous state, with a reputation for trend-setting,
California is attracting the most attention — and money — in an
intensifying debate over Proposition 64.
Silicon Valley tycoons and deep-pocketed donors with connections to the
legal medical marijuana industry are among the top financial backers of a
pro-pot campaign that has raised almost $17 million. Opponents have
raised slightly more than $2 million, including a $1.4 million
contribution from retired Pennsylvania art professor Julie Schauer.
Advocates on both sides say passage in California would likely ignite
legalization movements in other states, especially when the tax dollars
start adding up. California's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office
estimated the state could collect up to $1 billion a year in marijuana
taxes.
"As California goes, so goes the nation," said University of California, Berkeley political science professor Alan Ross.
If "yes" votes prevail across the country, about 75 million people
accounting for more than 23 percent of the U.S. population would live in
states where recreational pot is legal. The jurisdictions where that's
already the case — Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington state and the District of Columbia — have about 18 million residents, or 5.6 percent of the population. Twenty-five states allow medical marijuana.
According to national polls, a solid majority of Americans support
legalization. Gallup's latest survey gauged support at 58 percent, up
from 12 percent from when the question was first posed in 1969.
Gallup
says 13 percent of U.S. adults report using marijuana at present, nearly
double the percentage who reported using pot in 2013.
California voters rejected an attempt to legalize recreational marijuana
in 2010 after campaign leaders struggled to raise money and support for
a four-page ballot measure hastily written by the owner of a small
medicinal marijuana store.
This time, the 62-page ballot measure was crafted by political
professionals and has the backing of many elected officials, including
Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is running for governor in 2018. Current Gov.
Jerry Brown says he's close to announcing his position.
The measure would allow people 21 and older to legally possess up to an
ounce of weed and grow six marijuana plants at home. Pot sales would be
subject to various tax rates that would be deposited into the state's
Marijuana Tax Fund. Most of that money would be spent on substance-abuse
education and treatment. Some would be used to repair environmental
damage caused by illegal growers.
Opponents argue that the measure will do more harm than good by opening a
marijuana market dominated by small farmers to corporate interests and
encouraging children to use the drug through pot-laced sweets like gummy
bears, cookies and brownies.
The proposal "favors the interests of wealthy corporations over the good
of the everyday consumer, adopting policies that work against public
health," said Kevin Sabet, co-founder of the California-based advocacy
group Smart Approaches to Marijuana.
Napster founder and early Facebook investor Sean Parker
has contributed more than $3 million to the legalization effort, which
has also attracted sizable contributions from an organization backed by
billionaire George Soros and another backed by Weedmaps, which rates pot
stores throughout the state.
"It's a huge deal and it's long overdue," said Steven DeAngelo, owner of
one of the nation's largest medicinal marijuana dispensaries and a
Proposition 64 supporter.
In most of the states with marijuana ballot measures, polls have shown
the "yes" side leading. Sabet believes opponents of legalization would
attract more support if they could narrow a large fundraising gap and
spread their cautionary messages. He does not buy the other side's
argument that nationwide legalization will come sooner or later.
"Repeating that this is inevitable, and repeating they are so excited,
is part of their narrative to makes folks like us feel helpless," he
said.
Mason Tvert of the Marijuana Policy Project, a leading pro-legalization
group, said his side has a chance to win in most of the nine states, but
some losses will not derail the movement.
"Even if a measure doesn't pass, support will grow," he said, citing
failed ballot measures in Oregon and Colorado that preceded the
victories for legalization.
"Most people believe marijuana should be legal. It's a question of
whether opponents do a good job of scaring them out of doing it now,"
Tvert added. "We might see people opt to wait a couple more years."
All five states voting on recreational marijuana have seen intense
debate over the effect of legalization in the states that have already
taken that step.
Opponents of the ballot measures make an array of claims, contending,
for example, that Colorado's legalization of pot has coincided with an
increase in crime in Denver and fueled a jump in the number of traffic
fatalities linked to marijuana use.
However, an analysis by three academic experts, published this month by
the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute, asserted that the impact of
legalization has been minimal.
"The data so far provide little support for the strong claims about
legalization made by either opponents or supporters," the analysis said.
Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron, one of the co-authors of the
study, predicted Californians would approve Proposition 64, but he was
less certain of the outcome in his home state of Massachusetts, where
the Republican governor, Charlie Baker, and the Democratic mayor of
Boston, Marty Walsh, have teamed up to oppose legalization.
Miron said it's difficult to predict when legalization might get support
in Congress or surge to approval in a majority of states.
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