Facing an uphill battle, proponents of a ballot measure
to legalize marijuana are mapping out a campaign stressing
the millions of dollars in tax revenue that pot could
provide. The initiative, sponsored by Oakland marijuana magnate
Richard Lee, would legitimize the sale of marijuana
and allow pot shops to open their doors in cities that
permit it. Local authorities could also decide how
to tax and regulate marijuana sales, although it’s unclear if federal officials would tolerate such
a bold and unprecedented move. Many of the state’s most important politicians want nothing to do with
the measure, which would allow anyone over the age
of 21 to grow or possess a drug considered by the federal
government to be highly addictive and of no medical
value. Despite lawmakers’ reluctance, political consultants working on the initiative
claim a marijuana tax could contribute more than $1 billion toward reducing California’s $20 billion budget deficit. Opponents call that a pipe
dream. "As my wife says, that’s just bong economics," said John Lovell, a lobbyist
who represents a coalition of law enforcement groups
that are against the measure. In fact, there is uncertainty about how much tax revenue
could be generated, or if federal officials will even
allow the legalization of marijuana. According to the
state Legislative Analyst’s Office, "The amount of all the various revenues that
could be generated by this measure depend considerably
on the extent to which the federal government enforces
its laws against marijuana in California." Last February, US Attorney General Eric Holder said
the Justice Department would no longer raid medical
marijuana dispensaries that comply with state law. However, his office has not indicated if it would tolerate
marijuana for people without a medical need. A Republican political consultant predicted the issue
would find little support from politicians outside
the Bay Area. "My guess is most if not all Republicans will oppose
it and some Democrats will support it," said Ray McNally,
a partner in the Sacramento consulting firm McNally
Temple & Associates. "Others running for statewide office will
probably hide under the bed." Phone calls and emails to three gubernatorial candidates
– Jerry Brown, Steve Poizner and Meg Whitman – were not returned. Four Democratic candidates for Attorney General, Kamala
Harris, Chris Kelly, Ted Lieu and Alberto Torrico,
said they oppose the measure. Republican Tom Harman
said he opposes it. Five other GOP candidates did not
return phone calls seeking comment. The 2010 campaign is better funded and organized than previous
attempts to decriminalize marijuana. Lee, founder of
an Oakland medical marijuana dispensary and Oaksterdam
University, a marijuana trade school, spent $1 million to gather 680,000 signatures calling for the initiative to be placed
on the November ballot. The Secretary of State’s office is now checking to see whether at least 433,971 of those signatures – the minimum required for placement – are valid.
Lee’s corporate holding company, S.K. Seymour LLC, has also hired SCN Strategies, a San Francisco political consulting firm that has worked for Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign. Lee has also contracted with Blue State Digital, an agency that has provided advocacy, fundraising and social networking technology for the website TaxCannabis.org.
“This is not a whim,” Dan Newman, a consultant with SCN Strategies, said. "The initiative is carefully crafted, well-funded, and professionally run. There will be TV ads, mail, sky writing – whatever it takes to communicate with voters – and a very active and engaged new media component."
Lovell, the lobbyist for the state Police Chiefs Association,
the Narcotics Officers Association and the Peace Officers
Association, said opponents saw some of the same arguments
in 2008 in the battle over handling non-violent drug offenses.
"We learned a couple of things from that," he said,
"We did not have to match the legalizers dollar for
dollar in the campaign. They outspent us five to one.
But our message was before voters and it resonated.
That's why we succeeded." Polls show Californians’ attitudes about pot have softened since medical marijuana
dispensaries began opening in 2004. In the two decades before that, – 35 percent in 1983. By 2004, the number had crept up only slightly to 39 percent. But the past five years have seen an enormous shift
in popular sentiment. In a Field Poll conducted in
April 2009, 56 percent of voters said they were in favor of legalizing
marijuana for recreational use and taxing its sale. "When something changes I ask myself what happened,
what events had an impact on voter attitudes," said
Mark DiCamillo, the director of the Field Poll. "The
biggest thing I can think of is Initiative 215," he said, referring to the ballot measure that legalized
marijuana for medical purposes and took effect in 2004. "It seems to have moderated and taken away some of
the public fears about marijuana." Yet analysts and pollsters agreed the latest survey
reflects only moderate support. "Fifty-six percent is a hard sell," McNally, the Republican
strategist, said. "You typically want to start out
above 60 percent or above. Because as a campaign unfolds, support
typically drops. "I think this goes down. I’m not sure everyone is ready to have head shops all
over the place," he said. "That’s the other thing working against this initiative – some people have the sense that things are changing
too fast. Like health care, it’s too much, too soon. In that kind of environment,
do they really want to legalize marijuana?" Steven Maviglio, the head of Forza Communications,
a campaign firm in Sacramento that works with Democrats,
agreed that marijuana supporters are facing an uphill
battle. "They have to make it look like mainstream
California to appeal to moms and swing voters, not
just pot heads who want marijuana," he said. On the other hand, he said, voters recognize that marijuana
is a multi-billion dollar crop, and it makes fiscal sense to regulate
an industry that isn’t paying its fair share of taxes. "There has been more enthusiasm for this than anything
I’ve seen in a long time," he said. I was sitting in
on a focus group the other day and people are voluntarily
bringing this up," Maviglio said.
