MPP Drops Maine Legalization Initiative, Joins Forces with Grassroots Legalizers
One of the biggest problems affecting marijuana legalization now that four states have succeeded in ending marijuana prohibition is that everybody wants to get in on the game. But now it appears, at least in one state, legalizers have figured out it isn’t wise to split the funding, volunteers, and support between multiple competing initiatives to legalize marijuana.
In California, there are at least seven or eight different groups that have filed or will file initiatives for 2016. In Arizona, Massachusetts, and Maine, the pattern that has emerged is to have one grassroots-led, liberally-construed initiative competing against one professional-led, more-cautious initiative submitted by the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP).
Like MPP’s initiative that has already made the ballot in Nevada, these efforts are known by the branding “Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol” (CRMLA). But now, MPP is dropping its CRMLA in Maine and uniting behind the grassroots efforts of Legalize Maine to get their initiative on the ballot for 2016.
“Joining forces is the best step forward, not only for our respective campaigns, but for Maine as a whole,” explained David Boyer from MPP’s campaign in Maine via written statement. “We all agree marijuana prohibition has been a colossal failure and that it must be replaced with a system in which marijuana is legal for adults and regulated like alcohol. We can more effectively accomplish our shared goal by combining our resources and working together instead of on parallel tracks.”
Here are the details of the legalization proposal by Legalize Maine:
The campaign now needs to collect over 61,000 signatures from registered Maine voters to put this single initiative on the ballot. Paul McCarrier, head of Legalize Maine, is excited about the combined forces that will now be fighting to end marijuana prohibition in Maine, saying, “Both campaigns have done a great job of educating voters, organizing volunteers, and raising funds, and now we can ramp up those efforts even more.”
A spring poll by Portland-based Critical Insights found that 65 percent of Mainers support the legalization of marijuana.