The Arizona Republic

Legalized marijuana movement loses donor

Many unsure who can replace Lewis’ support

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS, Ohio — With the death of Cleveland billionair­e and philanthro­pist Peter B. Lewis, the push for relaxed U.S. marijuana laws lost its most generous supporter. That’s left supporters wondering what comes next.

Lewis, chairman of Progressiv­e Insurance, died Saturday at age 80. Since the 1980s, he had donated an estimated $40 million to $60 million to marijuana law reform — including underwriti­ng ballot campaigns, research, political polling and legal defense efforts.

Largely through Lewis’ efforts, and those of several other billionair­es, 20 states since 1996 have passed medical marijuana laws, 17 have decriminal­ized the drug and two have passed legalizati­on language.

Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said organizati­ons that relied on Lewis’ largesse will almost certainly need to build new fundraisin­g structures if they want to carry on. Those include some 25 nonprofit groups that have grown up around the medical marijuana and marijuana legalizati­on questions.

“For this epoch, from 1995 to 2013, there’s no peer on the Earth regarding who put money up for marijuana law reform,” St. Pierre said.

He said polling has identified 40 million U.S. marijuana consumers among 300 million Americans, yet only perhaps 30,000 people over a decade have donated to groups like his.

“Frustratin­gly, Peter Lewis really was the sole funder for so many entities,” he said.

“Now we’re going to find out whether, when the funder’s no longer there, is this really a movement?”

Carla Lowe, founder of the California-based political action committee Citizens Against Legalizing Marijuana, said she has no doubt that proponents of relaxed drug laws will find the resources to promote their agenda.

“There’s plenty of money out there. The drug money is beyond what I can begin to comprehend,” she said.

“I’ve been fighting this for 37 years, and I’ve seen nothing but more money, not less.”

She listed billionair­es George Soros, Men’s Wearhouse founder George Zimmer, and Phoenix University CEO John Sperling among those who will carry on.

“On our side, we need a George Soros but we don’t have one,” she said.

“It’s moms, dads and grandparen­ts just pounding away and never giving up.”

A key element of Lewis’ reform efforts was the $7 million provided for the American Civil Liberties Union’s drug litigation task force, St. Pierre said.

That was on top of tens of millions of dollars given to the ACLU in general support.

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