Florida takes early steps to advance recreational marijuana question to next year's ballot
The procedural move comes after the campaign behind the issue, Smart and Safe Florida, filed a complaint with the Florida Supreme Court, alleging that officials in Republican Governor Ron DeSantis administration were trying to improperly block the measure from getting on the ballot in 2026.
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Florida elections officials have taken early steps under pressure from activists to advance a proposed initiative to legalise recreational marijuana to next year's ballot, legal filings show. The procedural move comes after the campaign behind the issue, Smart and Safe Florida, filed a complaint with the Florida Supreme Court, alleging that officials in Republican Governor Ron DeSantis' administration were trying to improperly block the measure from getting on the ballot in 2026. In a November 17 legal filing, Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd argued that the lawsuit is now moot and should be dismissed. That's after state officials issued a formal letter to Smart and Safe Florida and submitted the proposed ballot amendment to the state's attorney general. Those steps represent official confirmation that the campaign has gathered the hundreds of thousands of voter petitions needed to qualify for the ballot, triggering the process for the state Supreme Court to ultimately review the proposed amendment language. Those steps are required by state law in order for the issue to advance to the ballot. The dispute follows a yearslong clash between progressive organizers seeking to amend the state's constitution, and the conservative governor, who in 2024 used state money and his political influence to successfully campaign against efforts to legalise adult personal use of marijuana and expand abortion rights. For years, Florida voters have turned to the citizens' ballot initiative process to bypass the Republican-dominated Legislature and advance progressive policies such as raising the minimum wage and restoring the voting rights of people with felony convictions.
In May, DeSantis signed a law creating new hurdles for citizen-driven ballot initiatives, changes critics say would make it prohibitively expensive and effectively impossible for grassroots campaigners to get issues on the ballot. Since the passage of the law, a campaign to expand Medicaid in the state announced it's delaying its push to get the question on the ballot until 2028.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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