Homeless in Arizona

Articles on Legalizing Marijuana

Poll: Arizona voters likely to reject recreational marijuana initiative

  While I am for complete legalization of not just marijuana but of all drugs I am against the phoney baloney MPP initiative to legalize recreational marijuana.

It's mostly about making billionaires out of the owners of the existing 85 or so medical marijuana dispensaries by giving them a second monopoly on growing and selling recreational marijuana.


Source

Updated Jul 11, 2016 - 11:20 am

Poll: Arizona voters likely to reject recreational marijuana initiative

By Bob McClay | July 11, 2016 @ 5:00 am

PHOENIX — Arizonans may get to decide in the November election whether to legalize recreational marijuana in the state.

Supporters of a campaign to legalize marijuana for recreational use submitted 258,582 petition signatures to the Secretary of State’s office in late June. They need 150,642 valid signatures to put the measure on the November 8 election ballot.

The Arizona Regulation and Taxation of Marijuana Act would legalize marijuana for anyone over 21 years old. Arizonans would be allowed to have six marijuana plants in your house, and marijuana sales would be subject to a 15 percent tax with the revenue from that going to education and healthcare.

But a new poll said if the vote were taken today, the plan would be defeated. The survey of likely voters by O.H. Predictive Insights said they are rejecting the measure.

“Thirty-nine percent of Arizonans would approve the measure while about 52.5 percent said they would vote ‘no,’ and then you’re sitting with about 8.5 percent undecided,” Mike Noble, managing partner and chief pollster of O.H. Predictive Insights, said..

“The ‘no’ vote — and it’s not much of a surprise — is because of rural Arizona. They tend to be more conservative,” Noble said. “The second-strongest was Maricopa county, where the ‘no’ vote was 54 percent. Pima County was at the low end at 45 percent against.”

The measure was essentially tied there with the “yes” vote coming in just more than 45.5 percent.

Noble said that the measure appears to be losing because older Arizonans are more likely to vote.

“They tend to be more conservative, and I don’t think they are nearly as warmed up to the idea (of legalized marijuana) as millennials or the younger generation,” said Noble.

Noble added that the pro-marijuana campaign does have what he calls “significant resources,” and it will be interesting to see if the vote will turn around.

 


Previous article on legalizing marijuana

Next article on legalizing marijuana

List of all articles on legalizing marijuana


Homeless in Arizona

Homeless In Arizona counter is screwed up