Topline
Voters in Maryland and Missouri approved a ballot measure Tuesday legalizing the recreational use of marijuana for adults, becoming the 20th and 21st states to make marijuana legal respectively, but Arkansas and North Dakota voted down similar ballot questions while votes were still being counted in South Dakota.
Key Facts
Some 65.5% of votes in Maryland were in favor of legalization with more than 80% of ballots counted early on Wednesday, roughly five hours after the Associated Press projected the ballot measure passed.
With nearly 90% of ballots counted, the AP also projected the passing of the measure in Missouri with 53.1% voting in favor of legalization.
However, Arkansas rejected a push to legalize recreational marijuana in their state, the AP projected at around 12:30 a.m.—roughly 56.1% of Arkansans voted no and 43.9% voted yes, with some 85% of votes counted.
In North Dakota, opponents of marijuana legalization outpaced supporters 55% to 45% with more than 95% of votes counted, leading the AP to project a defeat.
The AP still hasn’t called South Dakota’s ballot measure on legalization, but with 95% of votes counted, the “No” vote is leading by more than 6 points having received 53.1% of the vote.
Prior to Tuesday, recreational marijuana was already legal in California, New York, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, Virginia, Washington, Arizona, Massachusetts, Colorado, Oregon, Connecticut, Nevada, New Mexico, Maine, Rhode Island, Montana, Alaska and Vermont.
Tangent
Voters in Colorado are deciding on a ballot measure that would legalize the use of natural psychedelic drugs including psilocybin and psilocin, found in “magic mushrooms.” The measure would only allow psychedelics to be distributed by licensed “healing centers” throughout the state. If passed, Colorado would become the second state to legalize psychedelics after Oregon voters passed a legalization measure in 2020. Unlike Oregon’s law, the Colorado measure would not grant local governments the power to ban healing centers.
Key Background
A flood of states have moved to legalize recreational marijuana over the past decade, after voters in Washington and Colorado approved the first legalization measures in 2012, and polls have consistently suggested support is growing for legalization efforts. Gallup surveys in 2020 and 2021 found 68% of respondents supported legalizing marijuana—a massive increase from around 30% in favor of legalization when the pollster surveyed the topic in 2000. Democrats were generally quicker than Republicans to get on board with legalization efforts, but polls show Republicans are also steadily getting behind the push—a Morning Consult/Politico survey released last month found more Republicans in favor of full national legalization (47%) than those opposed (41%). Marijuana is officially banned at the federal level since it is classified as a Schedule I drug under the federal Controlled Substances Act, but federal authorities have largely refrained from interfering with state legalization efforts.
Chief Critic
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) encouraged residents of his state to vote against legalization, arguing it would encourage widespread use that could lead to more impaired drivers and employees showing up to work stoned. Proponents of legalization have long insisted such concerns are overblown, and claim marijuana is far safer than other legal drugs in widespread use, like alcohol.
Further Reading
Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson Leads Battle Against Adult-Use Cannabis Bill (Forbes)
Colorado Will Vote On Legalizing Psychedelic Mushrooms In November (Forbes)
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicholasreimann/2022/11/09/maryland-votes-to-legalize-recreational-marijuana-as-arkansas-and-north-dakota-vote-no-heres-how-cannabis-ballot-measures-are-faring/