Cannabis Legalization Effort In US Heartland Takes Many Paths

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
So a few states out West and a couple cities on the East Coast have voted to legalize marijuana. Does that mean legal pot can fly in the heartland?

A ballot proposal before Ohio voters next month would be the first in the nation to legalize both medical and recreational marijuana in a single vote. It's funded by private investors and mounted in an off-year election cycle, the only marijuana-related question on any state ballot this year.

Why such an unusual profile? Thank the complex politics of this king of politically divided states.

"The reason that we're a battleground state is because we shake it up. We shake it up in a big, big way," said Ian James, director of ResponsibleOhio, the legalization campaign.

That means roughly $4 million has been spent on TV ads so far – with varying messages targeted at parents, military veterans, blacks, union members and senior citizens. It means kids in wheelchairs promoting medical marijuana, a green bud-shaped mascot trolling college campuses and a tough-on-crime prosecutor touting economic benefits to cash-strapped police departments.

There's even a concurrent campaign proposing to purge old marijuana-related convictions if this year's Issue 3 passes.

James, a ballot-campaign veteran, said if it looks like chaos, it's not. It's a strategy – aimed at capturing various pockets of one of America's most well-studied electorates, one stretching from farm country to inner-city Cleveland to blue-collar Toledo to Appalachia.

"It's a multistate strategy inside the state of Ohio," James said. "Ohio's one of the most complex media-market states in the nation, next to New York, California, Texas. It costs over $1 million a week in an off year to be on TV."

That's the reason the campaign solicited deep-pocketed investors who will have exclusive right to 10 authorized marijuana growing sites and combined the more popular medical-marijuana issue with recreational pot appealing to younger voters.

Critics say the campaign's lack of a philosophical focal point doesn't represent creative swing state politics, but greed. Its vast wealth – $12 million spent and $12 million more raised last quarter – has allowed for constant polling and strategy re-adjustment.

"The problem as I see it is that their campaign looks like a mess, because they've attempted to triangulate or differentiate so many messages that their opportunism is readily apparent," said state Rep. Mike Curtin, a Columbus Democrat opposing the measure.

Detractors say ResponsibleOhio picked 2015 to get ahead of an anticipated onslaught of legalization proposals expected during the 2016 presidential election.

The campaign's prospectus told potential investors they'd be "on the front line of a projected $1+ billion annual sale potential" and positioned for business returns elsewhere.

"In short, if it works here, it will work anywhere, which follows the old saying, 'As Goes Ohio, So Goes the Nation,'" the document said.

Brittany Clingen, senior writer at political information service Ballotpedia, said the effort is being closely watched nationally because of its unique structure.

"'This Issue 3 could be a game changer in multiple ways if it passes," she said. "Not only would it be the first to combine medical and recreational marijuana but, from a ballot measure perspective, it's setting up this precedent of pay-to-play for direct democracy."

Philip Wallach, a fellow at the Brookings Institution who studies marijuana politics, said it's a one-of-a-kind issue, out of step with the more mainstream legalization movement and Ohio's particular self-identity.

"The idea that Ohio would be on the vanguard of any kind of issue relating to social politics is a little hard for me to wrap my head around," he said. With passage, Ohio would become the fifth state to legalize recreational marijuana after Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska.

Opponents have placed a separate initiative on the ballot that's designed to nullify legalization. It prohibits economic monopolies from being placed in Ohio's constitution and makes sure to specifically apply to the growing-site network proposed by ResponsibleOhio.

"Monopoly" is proving to be a hot-button word among Ohio's independent-minded voters, including farmers contemplating a new cash crop.

Ohio Farmers Union spokesman Ron Sylvester said the idea of "markets rigged for already wealthy interests" prompted his group's opposition: "Frankly, we didn't even have to engage members on issues of morality."

Daniel A. Smith, a political science professor at the University of Florida, said the anti-monopoly campaign could be enough to sink Ohio's legalization question.

"For opposition campaigns, you just have to find the one silver bullet to derail an initiative," he said. "Proponents have to defend all aspects of it."

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News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Cannabis Legalization Effort In US Heartland Takes Many Paths
Author: The Associated Press
Photo Credit: The Associated Press
Website: WKRN News
 
Big Money is trying to create barriers to entry that will make the rich richer. THIS IS WRONG AND NOT WHAT AMERICA SHOULD BE ABOUT.

BIG MONEY attempting to squash the little citizen again.

IF America goes as Ohio goes, then you Ohio voters better NOT let this go thru...
 
Because they are handing it over to the "highest" bidder! (LOL!!) And, it has nothing to do with a buzz!
And, so much to do with cronyism, in politics!
 
I believe, if Ohio fails. We will see legal sates repealed, don't believe me, watch the Republican debates tonight. The Democratic nominee, has already declared she will outlaw any recreational use. The Feds make too much money to let it progress any further, it is about police and prison revenues, the jobs and monies created far out way any taxes collected.
Sorry America, but you sit on you ass, you end up on your ass.
 
Sorry SWOGA, but there is no way you will see legal states repealed, the republican debate should be interesting since it's in Colorado, and why do you think Hillary will be the Dems. nominee? I think Bernie has got a good chance and he already admit he has smoked a few times and thinks the laws are to strict.
 
Sly, check out the Marijuana Policy Project and their grading of candidates stance on marijuana. Only one, Bernie is for legalization. The others range from limited medical only, to complete roll back of states that have legalized. Don't be taken in by the term "I support individual states", that does not remove it from schedule 1. That will not happen, it would bankrupt the judicial system, tens of thousands of cops would loose their jobs, and prisons would have to be closed. Feed the machine.
The only way Bern gets nomination, is if Hillary is indicted, or passes away. Unfortunate, but true.
 
Anyone who opposes this bill is a TRAITOR.

Every year, 10,000 Ohioans get arrested, jailed, fined, lose their jobs, lose custody of their children, and generally have their lives ruined. Why? Because of this plant. It's happening this year, and the next, and every year until we stop it.

Whatever is wrong with this bill is tiny compared to the good it does.

And let's think about the implications. There is no guarantee that 2016 will bring a better initiative to the voters. If this gets defeated, there might not be another attempt for a long time.

And how about the nation? A victory in Ohio will accelerate MJ legalization around the nation, while a defeat will be a big setback for everyone in this country.

To worry about who makes money on legal MJ is a pathetic waste of our time when people are going to jail and having their kids taken away.
 
One of the biggest problems I see comeing with the legalisation of cannabis is keeping the greedy bastards in big business out of the loop.
They already have the money to set up the farms and the contacts in government to ensure that they and only they will get the licences to grow the stuff. The governments both state and federal will go fo that simply because it is the only way that they will be able to derive any tax income from it. Put simply for the state or federal government to be able to tax the product they have to control the producers by licencing. You can bet that the cost of a licence will be far beyond what an individual can afford to pay. Leaving only those we despise already, the likes off Monsanto, Glaxo-Welcome, Bayer (who gave us Heroin) et al and the tobacco companies who already own the land to grow on getting the licences. Home growing will, in those states where it is permitted at present, be prohibited and where it is still illegal it will remain illegal but the penalties for growing will change, they will become harsher. While it is true that as the old adage goes 'the squeaky hinge gets the oil' and in the context of cannabis legalization this means that more jurisdictions may legalise it, there is an equally likely probability, it may be legalized but the door may well be nailed shut on the personal grower in favour of corporate entities wih huge bankrolls, particularly Tobacco cartels who are currently facing massive reductions in income due to rising taxation and falling demand. Legal Marijuana particuarly recreational MJ will be a massive financial windfall for them and you can guarantee they will not want people growing their own and will provide the funds to make sure that the DEA etc, ensure that their profits are not undermined by the small scale grower or the guy or gal who grows a few plants for their own personal use whether for recreational or medical reasons. I am something of a cynic and find it difficult to trust any politician, or to believe any politician is capable of doing anything that does not benefit them directly.
 
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