Effective Jan. 1, Nevada made commercial cultivation, sale and possession of recreational marijuana legal. The state had previously decriminalized the drug for small quantity possession, and marijuana was already legally available for medical use.
Prior to last November, commercial recreational marijuana was legal only in four states â Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington and the District of Columbia. In the November election, recreational marijuana initiatives were on state ballots in five additional states. Arizona voters defeated legalization (by a 4 percent margin). However, four states voted to fully legalize the drug. In Maine, legalization passed by a razor-thin margin (0.4 percent) and marijuana initiatives carried as well in Massachusetts (by 7 percent), in Nevada (by 9 percent) and in California (by 14 percent).
The passage of the Nevada Marijuana Legalization Initiative, Question 2, was a solid statewide win by 100,000 votes, the entire margin of victory coming from Clark County. The initiative ran even in Nevadaâs other 16 counties, with Question 2 actually losing in 13 of Nevadaâs 17 counties.
Question 2 passed in spite of opposition from âbig nameâ political leaders and organizations. Republican Governor Brian Sandoval (âcategorically opposedâ) and Democratic Senator Harry Reid (âvery, very dubiousâ) were noteworthy opponents. Both Senate candidates, Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto and Republican Dr. Joe Heck, opposed Question 2. Likewise, two former Nevada Governors, Republican Robert List and Democrat Richard Bryan, were against it. GOP opponents also included Attorney General Adam Laxalt, Lt. Gov. Mark Hutchison, Reps. Mark Amodei and Crescent Hardy, and Sen. Dean Heller.
Legalization proponents also overcame opposition from important Nevada state associations, representing law enforcement( sheriffs and chiefs and district attorneys); health professionals (doctors and nurses); the casino industry; and organized taxpayers. Six Nevada newspapers, including the two largest â the Las Vegas Review-Journal and Reno Gazette-Journal â editorialized against Question 2, joining newspapers in Elko, Carson, Lahontan Valley and Pahrump.
Opposition to Question 2 was formidable, but proponents had major advantages. Public opinion on legalizing marijuana had shifted dramatically over the past 20 years. Proponents contended a majority of Nevadans no longer believed marijuana needed to be illegal. The âYes on 2â narrative argued passage would result in âcriminal justice reform,â an end of marijuana âblack marketsâ through regulation, and marijuana tax money directed to schools. Each claim was refuted by opponents.
Commercial recreational marijuana legalizationâs greatest advantage is money. In Colorado in 2012, the industry outspent legalization opponents by $5 to $1. In November 2016, California legalization proponents overwhelmingly outspent opponents by $11 to $1. In Nevada, the legalization spending advantage was narrower â $4.3 million for âYes on 2â vs. $3.5 million for opponents. However, the âYes on 2â campaign had major financial resources available to start their campaign more than two years before election day. In contrast, the âNo on 2â campaign received major funding extremely late in the process, only launching âProtecting Nevadaâs Childrenâ campaign 36 days before early voting began in 2016.
Republican Governors Doug Ducey of Arizona and Charlie Baker of Massachusetts aggressively led bipartisan efforts to defeat marijuana legalization initiatives in their respective states in 2016. They raised money and helped organize opposition groups, beginning eight months before election day. Their efforts are credited for the defeat of legalization in Arizona and a close outcome in liberal Massachusetts. Nevada had no similar statewide âpolitical championâ to rally and organize bipartisan opposition to Question 2.
Opponentsâ âlate startâ in Nevada allowed for a limited campaign against the initiative, focused on marijuana edibles and small children. Few Nevada voters knew they were voting to enact a self-serving 13-page initiative written by the commercial marijuana industry for the promotersâ benefit.
Support for marijuana legalization tends to follow party lines. Of the eight states where voters have legalized adult-use marijuana, only one â Alaska â was a âred stateâ (i.e. Republican) last November. Nevada Democratsâ âblue waveâ sweep might also have contributed to the margin of victory for Question 2 in 2016.
Jim Hartman is an attorney residing in Genoa, NV and is president of Nevadans for Responsible Drug Policy.