From News Nation/AP:
“Push to
relax drug laws gains big victories on state ballots”
A nationwide
push to relax drug laws took a significant step forward Tuesday as more states
legalized marijuana for adults and voters made Oregon the first state to
decriminalize the possession of small amounts of street drugs such as cocaine,
heroin and methamphetamine. The drug measures were among 120 proposed state laws
and constitutional amendments that were on the ballot in 32 states. They
touched on an array of issues that have roiled politics in recent years —
voting rights, racial inequalities, abortion, taxes and education, to name a
few. But none directly dealt with the dominant theme of 2020 — the coronavirus
pandemic. That’s because the process to put measures on the ballot began, in
most cases, before the virus surged to the forefront.
The Oregon
drug initiative will allow people arrested with small amounts of hard drugs to
avoid going to trial, and possible jail time, by paying a $100 fine and
attending an addiction recovery program. The treatment centers will be funded
by revenues from legalized marijuana, which was approved in Oregon several
years ago. “Today’s victory is a landmark declaration that the time has come to
stop criminalizing people for drug use,” said Kassandra Frederique, executive
director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which backed the measure. The proposal
was endorsed by the Oregon Democratic Party, as well as some nurses and
physician associations. The Oregon Republican Party had denounced the drug
decriminalization measure as radical, and some prosecutors called it reckless. Oregon
voters also approved a measure making the state the first to legalize the
therapeutic use of psychedelic mushrooms.
Voters in New
Jersey and Arizona approved measures legalizing marijuana for adults age 21 and
older. In New Jersey, the Legislature now will have to pass another
measure setting up the new marijuana marketplace. The Arizona measure
also allows people convicted of certain marijuana crimes to seek expungement of
their records. The passage of the measure signaled a change of attitudes, after
Arizona voters narrowly defeated a legal pot proposal in 2016. South Dakota on Tuesday became the
first state where voters authorized both recreational marijuana and medical
marijuana via two separate initiatives in the same election. The legalization
of recreational marijuana was approved by voters in Montana, and medical
marijuana won approval in Mississippi. A decade ago, recreational marijuana was
illegal in all 50 states. Voters allowed it in Colorado and Washington in 2012,
sparking a movement that already included 11 states and Washington, D.C.,
heading into Tuesday’s elections. Supporters hope additional victories,
especially in conservative states, could build pressure for Congress to
legalize marijuana nationwide.
Two states
considered anti-abortion amendments with different results. Louisiana
voters passed a measure asserting there is no state constitutional right to
abortion — something that could come into play if the U.S. Supreme Court
overturns its Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide. In
Colorado, by contrast, voters defeated a measure to prohibit abortions after 22
weeks unless the pregnant woman’s life is endangered. Previous Colorado ballot
initiatives to limit abortion also failed in 2008, 2010 and 2014.
Several states
also were considering measures affecting voting rights. Virginia voters
passed a constitutional amendment taking power away from members of the
Democratic-led Legislature to draw voting districts for themselves and members
of Congress based on census results. It instead will create a bipartisan
commission of lawmakers and citizens to develop a redistricting plan that the
Legislature could approve or reject, but not change. Virginia is the sixth
state in the past two general election cycles to pass measures intended to
prevent gerrymandering — a process in which politicians draw voting districts
to benefit themselves or their political parties. Voters in Missouri, which
passed a redistricting reform measure in 2018, voted Tuesday on whether to roll
back key parts of it before it can be used next year. The Missouri
measure, which remained undecided in a close vote, would repeal a nationally
unique model using a nonpartisan demographer to draw state House and Senate
districts to achieve “partisan fairness” and “competitiveness.” Republicans who
control the Legislature put forth a new ballot measure this year that would
return redistricting duties to a pair of bipartisan commissions and drop
“partisan fairness” and “competitiveness” to the end of the criteria.
In Florida,
voters approved a measure gradually increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour
by 2026. The measure puts Florida in line with at least seven other states —
California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New
York — and Washington, D.C., which already have enacted laws to gradually boost
the minimum wage to $15 an hour.
In Mississippi,
voters approved a proposal for a new state flag with a magnolia design. The
vote came after legislators in June ended the use of a flag bearing a Confederate
battle emblem. In Rhode Island, whose official name is “Rhode Island and
Providence Plantations,” residents in a close vote were deciding whether to
eliminate the final three words, which some say evoke a legacy of slavery.
Tax proposals
were on the ballot in more than a dozen states. Tobacco tax hikes passed in Colorado
and Oregon. Colorado voters also approved a slight income tax
cut. Proposals to charge higher income taxes on the wealthy were trailing in Illinois
but leading in Arizona, where the new revenue would fund pay raises for
teachers and other school personnel. A California property tax increase
on businesses remained close.
In California,
Uber, Lyft and other app-based ride-hailing and delivery services have
prevailed in their expensive gamble to keep drivers classified as independent
contractors. Proposition 22 pitted the powerhouses of the so-called gig
economy, including DoorDash, Postmates and Instacart, against labor unions.
It’s the most expensive California ballot measure ever — more than $220 million
was spent, most by the gig companies. The measure creates an exemption to a
state law that would have made drivers eligible for benefits that come with
being company employees. San Francisco-based Uber and Lyft threatened to pull
out of California if they lost. Among the many California ballot proposals was
one to repeal a 1996 initiative that prohibits affirmative action programs
granting preferential treatment based on race, sex, color, ethnicity or
national origin in public employment, education or contracting. It was trailing
in the polls.
^ The worse
ballot question to be approved was in Oregon and them decriminalizing hard
drugs like heroin, LSD, etc. That just shows how out-of-touch the people in
Oregon are with reality (in case all their violence, destruction and death
since last May didn’t show that already.) ^
https://news.yahoo.com/push-relax-drug-laws-gains-074015533.html
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