Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Candidates split over recreation­al marijuana

Rauner against, Pritzker for, based on complex factors

- By Robert McCoppin

In supporting marijuana legalizati­on, Illinois gubernator­ial challenger J.B. Pritzker could usher in a change that affects everything from criminal justice to public health to the economy if he’s elected.

In coming out against recreation­al use of cannabis, incumbent Gov. Bruce Rauner may appeal to his base, while finding himself on the less popular side of the issue.

With polls indicating that the Democratic Pritzker is favored — and other surveys suggesting wide support for adopting a recreation­al pot law — his election could put Illinois on the fast track to becoming one of the first Midwestern states to legalize cannabis.

The Republican Rauner, by contrast, has said he’s “very much opposed” to legal marijuana.

His campaign elaborated last week, issuing a statement that

legalizati­on “is a much newer and more complex issue that should not be considered by the state of Illinois until all possible positive and negative effects are understood.”

The challenger says legal cannabis could generate an estimated $350 million to $700 million in annual taxes, echoing what sponsors have touted about a pending legalizati­on bill. Pritzker also says the change would increase safety for people who use the drug and improve racial justice, since minorities are disproport­ionately arrested for marijuana possession. And the nominee says he would make sure minorities are involved in helping run the new industry.

“J.B. knows we can legalize marijuana in a safe way that will benefit communitie­s across Illinois and he is ready to do that as governor,” his campaign told the Tribune.

Rauner, however, has cited concerns about the impact on public health and safety, like increased emergency room visits and drugged driving arrests in states with legal pot, along with increased substance abuse. Rauner says states that allow it are conducting a massive “human experiment.”

But marijuana supporters like Dan Linn, who heads the Illinois chapter of the marijuana law reform group NORML, expect the issue to give Pritzker a bump at the polls, particular­ly among younger voters.

“It’s going to be part of a broader wave of young people going to the polls,” Linn said. “When there’s such an obvious difference between the two major party candidates, this issue will cause a lot of younger people to support the Democrat.”

Nine states have legalized pot, all except Vermont by voters approving ballot questions. Illinois doesn’t provide for the same binding referendum procedure as some other states, so it’s up to lawmakers to decide the issue. Traditiona­lly, many politician­s have opposed legalizati­on as part of a broader tough-on-crime agenda. But public opinion nationwide has shifted, in part because of the perception that the drug is less harmful than legal substances like alcohol, tobacco or prescripti­on drugs.

In Illinois, almost twothirds of respondent­s statewide supported legalizati­on, according to polls conducted each of the past two years by the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University. That was backed up by a similar ratio of voters who supported legalizati­on in an advisory referendum held in Cook County in March.

Also, Canada recently became the second country, after Uruguay, to make pot fully legal nationwide.

In the U.S., cannabis remains illegal at the federal level, but prosecutor­s generally have not gone after people complying with state programs. President Donald Trump has said he probably will support a bill to ease the federal ban and let states decide the issue.

Pritzker has family connection­s in the cannabis industry. His second cousin Joseph “Joby” Pritzker and Joby’s father, Nicholas J. Pritzker, are investors in Tao Capital Partners, whose portfolio includes Juul, the electronic-cigarette maker; Pax Labs, which also sells vaporizers and pods of cannabis; and MJ Freeway, which markets cannabistr­acking software. Joby Pritzker also sits on the board of the reform-focused Marijuana Policy Project.

J.B. Pritzker’s campaign spokeswoma­n said he has no connection to those companies, and they don’t influence his policy.

Since late 2015, Illinois has allowed sales of cannabis for medical use, which was approved under Rauner’s predecesso­r, Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn. The law was one of the strictest of its kind in the nation, limiting use to patients certified by doctors as having one of about 40 conditions such as cancer or fibromyalg­ia.

The Rauner administra­tion initially rejected efforts to add other conditions to the list, though the governor did support adding terminal illness and post-traumatic stress disorder in 2016. This August, Rauner signed a bill that allows marijuana to be used in place of prescripti­on opioids and that eases access for all prospectiv­e patients by eliminatin­g requiremen­ts for fingerprin­ts and background checks.

The changes are expected to expand greatly the program beyond its current, relatively small size, with 46,000 certified patients and $12 million in monthly sales. But if legalizati­on comes next year, as proposed, it would make Illinois one of the largest potential markets in the nation.

Voters in at least four states will see marijuana ballot questions this fall. Michigan and North Dakota will vote on legalizati­on, while Missouri and Utah voters will take up the question of allowing the drug for medical uses. Sixteen counties in Wisconsin also plan to hold advisory ballot questions on legalizati­on.

Yet there’s a reason commercial­s haven’t filled television with images of pot smokers. Experts say marijuana alone is unlikely to determine the election.

Though the issue typically favors Democrats, who more often support legalizati­on, some research indicates it doesn’t necessaril­y drive turnout and that voters often identify other issues as higher priorities, like crime and taxes.

While Colorado saw a bump in turnout among young voters for its legalizati­on referendum in 2012, there’s little evidence of that in other elections, according to Kei KawashimaG­insberg, director of the Center for Informatio­n and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University. “The issue alone doesn’t really turn out young people,” she said.

Campaigns typically focus more on establishe­d, middle-aged voters, she added. And while younger voters tend to support legalizati­on more often, now a majority of voters over 55 do as well.

Some special interest groups are trying to make legalizati­on a voting issue. The Coalition for a Safer Illinois called for voters to end “the wasteful and cruel policy of prohibitio­n.” The message was signed by Chris Lindsey, senior legislativ­e counsel for the Marijuana Policy Project.

The project, which lobbies for legalizati­on, has spent about $1.6 million on lobbying this year, more than ever before, according to the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics, a watchdog group. But Lindsey said the group is concentrat­ing efforts more on other states with ballot questions.

Lavon Pettis, director of Healthy and Productive Illinois, which opposes legalizati­on, said concerns about racial injustice were initially addressed by decriminal­ization of small amounts of the drug in Illinois in 2016, and should be further addressed by changes in policing. And she expects any tax windfall from marijuana to be offset by increased societal costs for things like driving under the influence, substance abuse and failed workplace drug tests.

“Marijuana is playing a major role in the Illinois election right now,” she said. “They’re trying to bandwagon off something they think is cool. But no one is talking about the costs.”

 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? In coming out against recreation­al use of cannabis, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner may appeal to his base, while finding himself on the less popular side of the issue.
JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE In coming out against recreation­al use of cannabis, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner may appeal to his base, while finding himself on the less popular side of the issue.
 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? In supporting marijuana legalizati­on, Democratic governor nominee J.B. Pritzker, if elected, could usher in a change that affects everything from criminal justice to the economy.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/CHICAGO TRIBUNE In supporting marijuana legalizati­on, Democratic governor nominee J.B. Pritzker, if elected, could usher in a change that affects everything from criminal justice to the economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States