Oklahoma voters might see an adult-use marijuana legalization initiative on their 2026 ballots.
Legacy advocacy group Oklahomans for Accountable Hashish Motion (ORCA) would want to gather greater than 172,000 signatures by July to put proposed State Query 837 on state ballots, in line with The Oklahoman.
For that to occur, although, the measure’s language should survive any authorized challenges.
The measure could be the second try by legalization advocates to introduce leisure hashish in what was for years probably the most business-friendly medical marijuana market within the nation.
Oklahoma voters decisively rejected adult-use marijuana legalization in a low-turnout March 2023 particular election, with 61.67% of voters opposed.
ORCA Director Jed Inexperienced informed The Oklahoman that Query 837 is crafted with that loss in thoughts.
As written, State Query 837 would:
- Protect current MMJ rules, with gross sales regulated by the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA).
- Permit adults 21 and older to buy hashish from current MMJ dispensaries.
- Impose a brand new 10% excise tax on adult-use purchases.
Legalizing adult-use marijuana in Oklahoma might reverse a pattern during which 40% of MMJ operators within the state have given up their licenses over the previous yr.
However passing adult-use legalization – or another poll measure – might hinge on a proposed change to the state voter-initiative course of that state lawmakers are contemplating.
Senate Invoice 1027, which might drastically restrict the variety of signatures that may be gathered from the state’s high-population areas, handed the state Senate in March on a party-line vote.
Opponents, together with ORCA, say it will successfully curtail direct democracy.
And it’s a part of a sample seen throughout the nation of states with poll initiatives pushing new restrictions that may make passing voter initiatives tougher.
That features Florida, the place voters rejected adult-use legalization in November.