San Francisco Chronicle

New political landscape: Pot not an issue

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DENVER — Colorado has seen feisty debates this fall, with candidates in close races for governor, Senate and the U.S. House arguing over abortion rights, energy policy and the death penalty. Just don’t expect any of them to talk much about the biggest news of the year: legal pot.

While the state’s 10-monthold marijuana retail experiment has received worldwide attention and sales of recreation­al and medical pot have generated more than $45 million for state coffers, most voters have collective­ly shrugged. Prediction­s that they would go scrambling back to the polls to repeal the legal pot law they passed in 2012 haven’t materializ­ed.

Instead, the political landscape has changed, with some candidates, including the governor, accepting tens of thousands of dollars in donations from people within the fledgling pot industry.

Now, the only ones bringing it up on the campaign trail are third-party and independen­t hopefuls — all backers of legal pot. Many of them take issue with the state’s high pot taxes — more than 30 percent in many jurisdicti­ons — or with regulation­s they consider onerous.

“I don’t know why politician­s aren’t talking about this,” said independen­t gubernator­ial candidate Mike Dunafon, a long-shot candidate who is touting endorsemen­ts from rappers Snoop Dogg and Wyclef Jean because of his embrace of the drug.

Maybe it’s because the majorparty candidates almost universall­y agree. They say when asked that they personally opposed making the drug legal but respect the voters’ wishes. And while the marijuana rollout has not been without prob- lems, including concerns about children getting potent edible pot, there have been no publicsafe­ty problems widespread enough to focus voters’ minds on a repeal effort.

“The people of Colorado have made their decision,” said Republican Rep. Cory Gardner, who is challengin­g Democratic Sen. Mark Udall in a race that could determine whether Republican­s pick up enough seats to take control of the chamber.

Gardner and Udall were asked about pot last week in their final debate.

“I opposed it when it happened,” Gardner said of the 2012 marijuana vote. “But the founders always intended the states to be laboratori­es of democracy, and right now we are deep in the heart of the laboratory.”

Udall agreed. “We need to work together as a delegation to make sure the federal government butts out and lets us continue this experiment,” Udall said at the Denver debate.

Marijuana isn’t playing a big role in the tight governor’s race. Both Democratic Gov. John Hickenloop­er and Republican Bob Beauprez oppose legal marijuana.

After an Oct. 6 debate in which the governor jokingly called the pot vote “reckless,” Hickenloop­er’s aides reached out to marijuana industry workers — a move that underscore­d the sensitivit­y with which officials are dealing with a nascent industry that is generating revenue and making campaign donations.

A single pot-industry fundraiser for the governor raised some $40,000 last summer. The industry has also given at least $20,000 this year to congressio­nal candidates.

Pressed at another debate to clarify whether he thought marijuana legalizati­on should be repealed — an action that would require another public vote — the governor took a milder tack. “I’m not going to go as far as to say we should lead an effort to make it illegal. I think that that would be premature,” he said.

Beauprez has said legal pot should be reconsider­ed, but stopped short of saying he’d lead a repeal effort.

Politician­s’ marijuana hesitance reflects voters’ indifferen­ce on the topic. A September NBC/Marist poll asked residents about the law allowing adults over 21 to buy recreation­al pot. Thirty-three percent said they opposed the law but were “not actively trying to have it overturned.” Eight percent said they were working to overturn it.

Third-party and independen­t candidates, however, are sometimes making pot the hallmark of their campaigns, even in local races.

In a western Colorado state Senate contest, Libertaria­n candidate Lee Mulcahy has been throwing free dinners serving marijuana-infused foods. Voters have to show they’re 21 before noshing on foods like yellowtail crudo with coconut-ginger sativa oil and a salad tossed in marijuanai­nfused vinaigrett­e.

 ?? Photos by Brennan Linsley / Associated Press ?? Smaller-dose pot-infused brownies are divided and packaged last month at the Growing Kitchen in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreation­al marijuana use this year.
Photos by Brennan Linsley / Associated Press Smaller-dose pot-infused brownies are divided and packaged last month at the Growing Kitchen in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreation­al marijuana use this year.
 ??  ?? The Growing Kitchen offers pot-infused cookies for novice cannabis users, called the Rookie Cookie.
The Growing Kitchen offers pot-infused cookies for novice cannabis users, called the Rookie Cookie.

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