Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pardons spotlight pot ballot measures

Biden act could help legalizati­on

- ANDREW DEMILLO

There are few surprises expected on Election Day in solidly Republican Arkansas, where Donald Trump’s former press secretary is heavily favored in the race for governor and other GOP candidates are considered locks.

But one big exception is the campaign to make Arkansas the first state in the Mid-South to legalize recreation­al marijuana. A proposal to change the state’s constituti­on is drawing millions of dollars from opponents and supporters of legalizati­on, with ads crowding the airwaves.

President Joe Biden’s recent announceme­nt that he will pardon thousands of people for simple marijuana possession has shined a new spotlight on the legalizati­on efforts in Arkansas and four other states. Voters in Maryland, Missouri, North Dakota and South Dakota are also taking up measures on recreation­al marijuana.

Biden’s step toward decriminal­izing the drug could provide a boost for legalizati­on in some of the most conservati­ve parts of the country, experts say.

“The most powerful elected leader in the world has publicly declared it was a mistake to criminaliz­e people for using cannabis, and I think that will go a long way with regard to voters who may be on the fence,” said Mason Tvert, partner at VS Strategies, a cannabis policy and public affairs firm.

Biden’s announceme­nt only covers people convicted under the federal law. But he has called on governors to issue similar pardons for those convicted of state marijuana offenses, which reflect the vast majority of marijuana possession cases. The president also directed his health secretary and attorney general to review how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.

The moves come as opposition to legalizati­on has

softened around the country, with recreation­al marijuana legal in 19 states, despite resistance at the federal level. Advocates say it shows that states are ahead of the federal government on the issue.

“I think it’s an example of state level leadership and citizens pushing the federal government in the right direction,” said Eddie Armstrong, a former state legislator who leads the Responsibl­e Growth Arkansas group campaignin­g for legalizati­on.

In 2016, Arkansas became the first Bible Belt state to approve medical marijuana, with voters approving a legalizati­on measure. More than 91,000 people have cards to legally buy marijuana from state-licensed dispensari­es, which opened in 2019. Patients have spent more than $200 million so far this year, the state says.

An ad by Responsibl­e Growth Arkansas points to benefits such as the thousands of jobs it says legalizati­on would create. The main group opposing the measure is running an ad that urges voters to “protect Arkansas from big marijuana.”

The proposal faces opposition from Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a former head of the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion who criticized Biden’s pardon announceme­nt. Former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, the Republican front-runner to succeed Hutchinson, has said she will vote against the measure. Her Democratic rival, Chris Jones, said he supports it.

In neighborin­g Missouri, a proposed constituti­onal amendment would legalize recreation­al marijuana for adults 21 and older and expunge records of past arrests and conviction­s for nonviolent marijuana offenses, except for selling to minors or driving under the influence.

Supporters said they do not expect Biden’s pardon announceme­nt for some federal marijuana offenses to have much of an impact on the Missouri measure, which could expunge several hundred thousand state marijuana offenses.

“There is some danger of confusion, but I think most people understand the distinctio­n of the federal and state processes,” said John Payne, campaign manager for Legal Missouri 2022.

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican and former sheriff, opposes the ballot measure but has not aggressive­ly campaigned against it. He has no plans to emulate Biden’s pardon announceme­nt.

Parson has granted pardons “to individual­s who demonstrat­e a changed life-style, commitment to rehabilita­tion, contrition and contributi­on to their communitie­s — rather than as a blanket approach to undermine existing law,” said Parson spokespers­on Kelli Jones.

Similarly, North Dakota’s legalizati­on campaign does not expect to incorporat­e Biden’s pardons into its messaging. Mark Friese, treasurer of the New Approach Initiative backing the legalizati­on ballot proposal, said he doubts Biden’s pardon will have much of an impact in North Dakota or sway the legalizati­on effort.

“The number of North Dakotans convicted in federal court is small,” said Friese, a prominent North Dakota lawyer and former police officer. “Small amounts of marijuana are typically and historical­ly not prosecuted in North Dakota.”

Matt Schwiech, who is running South Dakota’s ballot initiative campaign to legalize recreation­al marijuana possession for adults, said the president’s pardons may hand the campaign a boost with older Democrats. It also underscore­s the campaign’s message that conviction­s for pot possession hurt people on job or rental applicatio­ns, as well as that enforcing pot possession laws is a waste of time and resources for law enforcemen­t, he said.

South Dakotans, including a sizable number of Republican­s, voted to legalize marijuana possession in 2020, but that law was struck down by the state Supreme Court, in part because the proposal was coupled with medical marijuana and hemp. This year, recreation­al pot is standing by itself as it goes before voters.

It remains unclear whether Biden’s pardon move will inject party politics into an issue that supporters say crosses partisan lines. For example, Arkansas voters in 2016 approved medical marijuana the same year they overwhelmi­ngly backed Trump.

All of the states with recreation­al marijuana on the ballot next month, except for Maryland, voted for Trump in the 2020 presidenti­al election. And the issue is going before voters as GOP candidates have been stepping up their anti-crime rhetoric.

“From our perspectiv­e the people of Arkansas, they didn’t vote for Biden initially and so we don’t anticipate this really having any sort of influence over anybody’s decision,” said Tyler Beaver, campaign manager for Safe and Secure Communitie­s, the main group campaignin­g against the proposal.

 ?? (AP/Stephen Groves) ?? Kayla Snedeker (right) assists a customer at The Flower Shop Dispensary, a medical marijuana retail facility, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota on Friday. The dispensary opened after South Dakota voters legalized medical marijuana in 2020.
(AP/Stephen Groves) Kayla Snedeker (right) assists a customer at The Flower Shop Dispensary, a medical marijuana retail facility, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota on Friday. The dispensary opened after South Dakota voters legalized medical marijuana in 2020.
 ?? (AP/Andrew DeMillo) ?? Melissa Fults, executive director of Arkansans for Cannabis Reform, talks to reporters Wednesday at the Arkansas state Capitol in
Little Rock. Fults, a longtime advocate for marijuana legalizati­on, is opposing a measure on the ballot in Arkansas to legalize recreation­al marijuana.
(AP/Andrew DeMillo) Melissa Fults, executive director of Arkansans for Cannabis Reform, talks to reporters Wednesday at the Arkansas state Capitol in Little Rock. Fults, a longtime advocate for marijuana legalizati­on, is opposing a measure on the ballot in Arkansas to legalize recreation­al marijuana.

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