In 2016 a Major Multi-State Push for Marijuana Legalization [View all]
http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/31876-in-2016-a-major-multi-state-push-for-marijuana-legalization
One of the most powerful and influential groups Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project was behind successful recreational measures in Alaska and Colorado, two of four states that now allow recreational use. MPP organizers hope to replicate those efforts in five other states during the 2016 elections, an undertaking they say will if successful prove significant for the effort to end marijuana prohibition.
One of them, Arizona, is a state that conservative icon Barry Goldwater called home. It frequently makes national headlines for controversial measures on immigration and gay rights. Voters passed the states medical marijuana program by the barest of margins in 2010.
Out of the five campaigns that were running nationwide, Arizonas definitely going to be the most heated, the most active, said Carlos Alfaro, the Arizona political director for the Marijuana Policy Project. He plans to win voters by inundating the airwaves, unveiling billboards, organizing rallies and hosting debates.
Its all part of the well-funded, well-organized machine thats driving the effort toward ending prohibition nationwide. Proponents have found so much success because they have learned how to secure financial backing, take advantage of changing attitudes and address fears about legalization. The Marijuana Policy Project aims to add California, Nevada, Massachusetts and Maine to its portfolio of ballot initiative successes in 2016, along with Arizona.
Legalization efforts many backed by other groups could appear on the ballot in about a dozen states next year. Twenty-three states and Washington, D.C., already allow for medical marijuana use. Four states Washington and Oregon, in addition to Colorado and Alaska and the District of Columbia allow adults to smoke pot recreationally.