Albuquerque Journal

Legal marijuana supported

Journal Poll says voters want marijuana legalized

- BY DAN MCKAY

By nearly a 2-1 ratio, New Mexico voters say they would support legislatio­n to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana sales to adults, according to a Journal Poll.

A majority of voters in all five geographic areas of the state — from liberal north-central New Mexico to the more conservati­ve eastside — say they would support a measure to legalize marijuana.

Brian Sanderoff, president of Research & Polling Inc., which conducted the survey, said the results reflect a broader change in public opinion over the years on a variety of social issues.

“Imagine asking this question 10 years ago in eastern New Mexico,” Sanderoff said in an interview. “We would have found support levels much lower in these conservati­ve stronghold­s.”

Altogether, the survey shows 60 percent of likely, proven voters in New Mexico would support a bill to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana sales to adults 21 and over. Thirty-two percent said they were opposed, and the rest had mixed feelings, didn’t know or wouldn’t say.

Support levels varied in different parts of the state, but a majority of those polled in every region said they would support legalizing marijuana. The results ranged from 73 percent support in north-central New Mexico to 52 percent in eastern New Mexico.

But there were stark difference­s based on party affiliatio­n.

Seventy-four percent of Democratic voters said they supported marijuana legalizati­on, while just 18 percent were opposed.

Among Republican­s, meanwhile, 53 percent were opposed and only 40 percent were in support.

Unaffiliat­ed voters, or those registered with other parties, offered strong support, with 67 percent in favor and 29 percent opposed.

A majority of every age group surveyed also said they would support a bill to legalize marijuana, but the percentage of support dropped among older voters.

Among voters 18 to 34, 79 percent were in support. Among voters 65 and older, 51 percent were in support.

Both Hispanic and Anglo voters said they would support marijuana legalizati­on. The sample sizes for other racial groups were too small to report their results with accuracy.

Support appears to be growing over time.

In 2014, a Journal Poll that asked a similar question found that 50 percent of likely voters opposed legalizati­on. Forty-four percent were in support.

New Mexico already allows medical marijuana.

But proposals to legalize and tax recreation­al use have repeatedly failed to make it through the Legislatur­e.

Democrats hold majorities in both chambers, but conservati­ve Democrats have joined Republican­s to block the legislatio­n.

Advocates, however, say the political environmen­t is changing. Republican Gov. Susana Martinez, who opposes legalizati­on, cannot run for re-election because of term limits, and her two potential successors are split on the issue.

Democrat Michelle Lujan Grisham said she would support legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana under certain circumstan­ces. The legislatio­n would have to protect patients’ access to medical cannabis, address workplace intoxicati­on, include provisions to keep marijuana away from children, and meet other standards, she said.

Republican Steve Pearce has opposed legalizati­on. After legalizing marijuana, he said, other states have struggled with some downsides, such as driving while intoxicate­d and use by young people.

The Legislatur­e, in any case, remains a barrier to legalizati­on unless key Democrats change their minds. The entire House is up for election this year, but senators aren’t on the ballot until 2020.

“I think eventually the day will come in New Mexico when marijuana is legalized,” Sanderoff said. “But there are still some powerful legislator­s who are skeptical.”

The Journal Poll is based on a scientific sample of 423 registered voters who cast ballots in the 2014 and 2016 general elections and said they were very likely to vote in this year’s election.

The poll was conducted Sept. 7-13. The voter sample has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.8 percentage points. The margin of error grows for subsamples.

All interviews were conducted by live, profession­al interviewe­rs, with multiple callbacks to households that did not initially answer the phone. Both cellphone numbers (64 percent) and landlines (36 percent) of proven general election voters were used.

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