Ohio voters say no to legalizing marijuana
CINCINNATI — In a major blow to marijuana legalization nationwide, Ohio voters Tuesday rejected a sweeping initiative that would have ended pot prohibition in the Buckeye State.
Unofficial election results found that the proposed constitutional amendment, known as Issue 3, was defeated 65.1% to 34.8%.
Voters
did write into the Ohio Constitution a provision known has Issue 2 that
prohibits the establishment of a “monopoly, oligopoly or cartel” in the
state’s founding document. The ballot issue, which the state
legislature wrote expressly to defeat the marijuana language, passed
52.6% to 47.4%.
At the Ohio Chamber of Commerce in Columbus,
opponents of legalization rejoiced in their double victory, achieved
even though they were outspent by a whopping 20-to-1 ratio. Curt
Steiner, campaign director for Ohioans Against Marijuana Monopolies,
told the gathering that important issues such as the medical use of
marijuana were “overshadowed by the brazen nature and far-reaching
extent of the statewide money grab attempted by Issue 3 backers — an
attempt voters concluded was, in this instance, an unsavory abuse of the
ballot issue process. See More =======>
“Issue 3 was nothing more and nothing less than a business plan to
seize control of the recreational marijuana market in Ohio,” Steiner
said. “Issue 3 was designed and built primarily to garner massive and
exclusive profits for a small group of self-selected wealthy investors.
Issue 3 was about greed, not good public policy.”
At a hotel half a
mile away investors in and supporters of the Ohio plan mourned the
results. Ian James, executive director of the private investor group
ResponsibleOhio, did not concede the election in remarks just before 10
p.m. ET. But he acknowledged that the outcome did not look good for his
campaign.
"This is a bump in the road," James said. "When the
statehouse refuses to deal with the voters, the voters have to make the
deal to make sure that their voices are heard, and the only way you can
do that is through the petition process."
Even the large urban
counties, Hamilton, Franklin, Cuyahoga, Lucas and Montgomery, where
Issue 3 supporters had hoped their support would rest, came out against
legalization.
Tuesday’s outcome concluded a yearlong campaign by ResponsibleOhio,
the private organization that put $20 million into the effort to
persuade voters to legalize marijuana. Had the issue won, Ohio would
have been the sixth jurisdiction to legalize after Alaska, Colorado, the
District of Columbia, Oregon and Washington state.
Election night
came with extra drama when ResponsibleOhio raced to court with an hour
before polls were officially to close at 7:30 p.m. Former state Sen.
Eric Kearney, representing ResponsibleOhio, asked for an injunction to
keep the polls open another 90 minutes because new precinct election
computers had slowed voting, and some voters were turned away. A judge
agreed to the request. The Secretary Of State’s Office then delayed all
election results until 9 p.m.
Voters who voted no on Issue 3
expressed concern about exposing children to marijuana. Karen Olchovy of
West Chester said voting down legalization was the main reason she
voted. "I basically don't want it available for my kids."
Katie
Kauffeld, of Mariemont, who voted no on Issue 3, said, “I don’t have a
problem with the legalization of marijuana, I have a problem with the
monopoly and the way this particular amendment was written up. I feel
like it gives certain players in the game a monopoly on the situation,
and I’d like to see a different setup for it.”
Democratic Rep.
Mike Curtin of Columbus, who led the campaign against Issue 3, said that
despite the defeat, the Ohio Legislature cannot ignore the electoral
sentiment and should address how to relax restrictions on marijuana.
“I’m
optimistic the legislature will take the bull by the horns and allow
the public debate to continue,” Curtin said. “I would hope that they
would do it in a very subdued, methodical, intelligent way.”
When
ResponsibleOhio gathered enough signatures in July to make the Nov. 3
ballot, the state’s political structure coalesced to launch its
offensive. Curtin recruited Steiner, a longtime political consultant in
Columbus, to craft a large coalition of organizations opposed to
legalization.
Through the summer and fall, ResponsibleOhio
outspent Ohioans to End Marijuana Monopolies. But the No on 3 group
acquired endorsements from more than 140 groups around the state — an
extraordinary melding of medical, legal, banking, law enforcement,
chambers of commerce, political entities, trade unions and mental health
and addiction agencies.
Ohioans Against Marijuana Monopolies
raised barely $1 million to fight ResponsibleOhio’s $20 million campaign
treasury. But the constituent groups used their internal communication
systems as well as news conferences and debate platforms to warn against
the dangers of legalizing marijuana in Ohio.
Comments
Post a Comment
Thank you For Comment On Agnes Riola's