Prop. 19 Backers Set to Try Again

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Supporters of Pot Legalization See This Year's Campaign As a Trial Run That, If Retooled, Could Win Voter Approval in '12.

Despite Proposition 19's loss at the polls last week, marijuana legalization advocates in California are already working on their comeback plan for 2012 and are almost giddy about their prospects.

They see the election as a trial run that could lead to a campaign with a better message, a tighter measure and more money. Both the winning and losing sides say California's voters rejected this specific initiative, but remain open to legalizing the easily obtainable drug.

The proponents have a huge head start compared to where they were two years ago. At that time, regulating and taxing marijuana was the dream of a handful of Oakland activists. Now, the campaign has a broader base of supporters, including labor and civil rights leaders. Big-money donors have shown a keen interest. And the state's electorate and media have seriously debated the issue.

In addition, the presidential election is expected to draw far more young voters to the polls. If they had shown up Tuesday, supporters note, Proposition 19 might have come close to passing. Even so, they also point out with bemusement, legalization outpolled Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina.

"The question about legalizing marijuana is no longer when, it's no longer whether, it's how," said Ethan Nadelmann, the executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, a national advocacy group that will play a pivotal role in any 2012 ballot measures in California or other states. "There's a really strong body of people who will be ready to pull the lever in the future."

California voters rejected Proposition 19, 54% to 46%. But a post-election survey by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner found they favor legalization 49% to 41%, with 10% uncertain. And 52% said that marijuana laws, like alcohol prohibition, do more harm than good.

The consultants who ran the opposition campaign found that voters who were undecided were susceptible to arguments for legalizing marijuana. They also reacted negatively to "reefer madness" arguments that pot was inherently dangerous or a gateway drug. "Our best opportunity to beat it was on the merits of 19 itself," said Wayne Johnson, the strategist for the No on 19 campaign.

A key issue for legalization supporters in 2012 will be to find the money to run statewide television advertising. "The Yes campaign always has the burden of proof. We have to make the case that things should change," said Doug Linney, the strategist for the Yes on 19 campaign.

The campaign hoped to spend between $7 million and $15 million but brought in about $4 million. More than $1.5 million came from Richard Lee, the main proponent, who owns a medical marijuana dispensary, nursery and trade school in Oakland. A few wealthy businessmen and young Silicon Valley entrepreneurs wrote sizable checks. "I think we found a lot of friends along the way that we will want to include from the get-go this time," Linney said.

On Saturday, Nadelmann told a conference on marijuana policy in Denver that the big donors who supported past measures would step up if the polls looked favorable. "They want to be in this to win," he said.

He noted that George Soros, the hedge-fund multibillionaire, donated $1 million to help Proposition 19 to clearly indicate his support for legalizing marijuana and that Peter B. Lewis, a retired insurance company executive, has decided to focus his philanthropy on marijuana reform.

Lewis, who donated more than $218,000 to pass Proposition 19, paid for Greenberg Quinlan Rosner to poll California voters. "Ballot measures are an option in 2012, but I can't speak to specific strategy at this time," Lewis said in a statement.

The next campaign in California will also start with a base of support.

The measure was backed as a job-creation plan by the state leadership of the Service Employees International Union and the United Food and Commercial Workers, but the unions were focused intensely on the races for statewide office. The state National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People and the Latino Voters League embraced Proposition 19 as a way to end a drug war in which African Americans and Latinos are arrested at much higher rates than whites, though the California exit poll showed both groups voted against the measure.

The campaign had also counted on young voters. Voters under 25 supported Proposition 19 by a 2-to-1 margin, but they did not turn out in big numbers. The measure would have allowed adults 21 and older to grow and possess marijuana. "As a motivator, it was always a big question," Linney said. "I always thought myself it was a little overrated."

But Anna Greenberg with Greenberg Quinlan Rosner said that if young voters turn out in 2012 in numbers typical for presidential elections, legalization "is poised to win."

Legalization advocates are also rethinking the measure. A provision designed to protect people who smoke marijuana from discrimination was assailed by opponents who said it would prevent employers from firing stoned nurses or bus drivers. Nadelmann said Saturday it might have to be sacrificed.

The Greenberg Quinlan Rosner poll found that voters, by 50% to 44%, think employers should be able to fire workers who test positive for marijuana even if they smoked it in their off hours.

The strongest message for Proposition 19, Linney said, was that it would control marijuana better than prohibition. But it allowed cities and counties to set the rules for marijuana sales and taxes, and opponents seized on that uncertainty to predict a chaotic patchwork of regulations.

Linney expects a vigorous debate among supporters over whether to keep a local approach. "That will be the central issue in drafting the next one," he said.

The Greenberg Quinlan Rosner poll found the issue splits voters, with 44% trusting city and county governments more to control marijuana, and 38% trusting the state more.

Johnson, the opposition strategist, said undecided voters seemed most intrigued by the promise that the measure would raise billions of dollars in tax revenue. But he said they became disillusioned when they learned there was no way to estimate how much would be raised.

"When that went away," he said, "they went away."


NewsHawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Page: AA1, continued on page AA4
Copyright: 2010 Los Angeles Times
Contact: letters@latimes.com
Website: Los Angeles Times - California, national and world news - latimes.com
Details: MapInc
Author: John Hoeffel
 
I am all for another run in 2012 what I am NOT in favor of is the Lee Group deciding what we will have in 2012 like they did in 2008/2009

We do not need to be divided and we do not need to look Republican again. That just doesn't work

We all need to have a Town-Meeting on the State Level and organize all 58 counties and connect all the nearly 600 Jurisdictions together in a Town Meeting on the State level!


1: The age should be 18
2: The Garden size whatever fits 99 plants for you.
3: The right to practice proper Horticulture written in Stone and not revocable!
4: The Right to sell/trade/gift any amount from a private California Citizen to any other Private California Citizen.
5: A Bill of rights for Medical people that grants the Same rights for people in Humboldt or Oakland as in Stanislaus or any other place in California! No More Jim-Crow-Cannabis Laws like banning outdoor gardens or taxing a 5x5 area at $27,000 a year!

One Regulatory agency and a Central tax system with a voter approved system of allowing local taxes we do not need to leave it up to the Jim-Crow-Cannabis law makers up and down the State. An example is Sacramento that allows Sex offenders to live closer schools than Cannabis stores can be to schools.. Own a Liquor store? Fine you can be close to a school in Sacramento too but not a Cannabis shop.

I commend Lee and the Prop 19 people but they left most of the Canna-People in the State like the Central Valley "swinging in the wind" when it came to economic Canna-prosperity.
2012 needs to be One for all and all for One. We must unify and negotiate early so we can organize all 58 counties not just leave it to almost 600 jurisdictions to decide what to do like Rancho Cordova's measure O where a 5x5 is Taxed at $27,000 a year and more.

Prop 19 failed because there was no standard we all approved of. They had their fun now a second shot is one that must be for the Canna-People of the whole state and not just for Canna-Business already poised to make Bank and need an expanded market like I feel prop 19 aimed to provide while keeping most of us in California in the Dark Ages in the Back water Jim-Crow-Cannabis Jurisdictions prop 19 folks described as "Dry Counties".
The War will not be over if we play games with the Canna-Liberty like prop 19 did in 2010. I doubt it will pass either if it repeats the same level of arrogance.
I lived in the Deep-South there is no point in expecting a hard-line Creationist to accept Evolution. It comes down to allowing Science to rule over Religion. the same analogy applies to Canna-Freedom in California We won't get permission from our Jim-Crow-Cannabis Communities for Canna-Freedom so we have to apply Democratic reform for the Whole State and to hell with the psudo-science folks claiming unfounded charges of cannabis related mythology ie "Cannabis is the Devil."
We are up against the On-The-Spot Tax system where our Canna-Brother and Canna-Sisters of color will pay more fines than White Canna-Brothers and Canna-Sisters now.
Remember any time an oppressor is willing to compromise that meant the know the have lost.
In 2012 Win or Lose we must stand for what we want not what the Lee group thinks will fly again.

With respects to 420Magazine, I am linking this at California2012.org I invite all our Canna-Brothers and Canna-Sisters to people that community as well as 420Magazine.

The Republicans are happy to have War funding into 2014. They will be little trouble now. 2012 is our time as the War people have their Drug of Choice if Karzai doesn't try and kick them out for messing with the Poppy Crop again!

I am hosting a forum. I hope we can people it with Prop 19 folks, We already have Jack Herer folks and perhaps we can review all the efforts that have been made in California even the 1972 prop 19

You Canna-Friend, Ernst
 
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