Could a ballot initiative on legalizing marijuana for personal use be coming to Arkansas?

David Couch — the Little Rock attorney who has campaigned for more than 20 ballot initiatives and authored the medical marijuana amendment that voters passed in 2016 — discussed the possibility with Arkansas Public Media in a recent interview broadcast on KUAR. He has a new amendment to legalize and tax marijuana for personal use typed up and ready to go, he said.

Advertisement

Couch said that as soon as he sees polling numbers that show approval above 58 percent in Arkansas, he’ll push to get the question on the ballot at the next available presidential election.

Couch said he hasn’t seen the magic number quite yet, though it’s getting close:

Advertisement

If you ask the generic question, ‘Should Arkansas legalize and tax marijuana for personal use?’ You’re bumping up around 52-53 is where it floats right now.

At 52 percent, I don’t think you’re there yet. 

These figures rely on multiple outside polling firms, Couch said, and are a tick above a recent finding by the University of Arkansas’s Arkansas Poll, which put support at 47 percent.

Couch’s hypothetical amendment would build upon the medical marijuana infrastructure established by the amendment he authored — the same state-regulated private dispensaries would be able to sell to people who want marijuana for personal use even if they don’t have an approved medical condition. However, marijuana would still be illegal to grow at home, which Couch said accounts for a major swing in public opinion. The medical marijuana system, meanwhile, would still be in place, untaxed, whereas marijuana for personal use would be taxed like alcohol or cigarettes, potentially bringing in more than $100 million in revenue according to Couch.

Advertisement

Jerry Cox of the Family Council told Arkansas Public Media that he expected that such a ballot push was coming, arguing medical marijuana had always been a Trojan Horse to get to legalization for recreational marijuana.

Much more from Couch and Cox, as well as expert analysis on legalization in Colorado and local polling in the Arkansas Public Media story, which you can listen to here.

Advertisement

Worth noting that Tom Cotton yesterday, bobbing and weaving a bit, told Roby Brock that he respects the decision of the people of Arkansas to enact medical marijuana, but believes that Arkansans oppose legalizing marijuana for recreational use. We’ll see.

Be a Part of the Fight

Step up and make a difference by subscribing or donating to the Arkansas Times, the progressive, alternative newspaper in Little Rock that's been fighting for truth for 50 years. Our tough, determined, and feisty journalism has earned us over 63,000 Facebook followers, 58,000 Twitter followers, 35,000 Arkansas blog followers, and 70,000 daily email blasts, all of whom value our commitment to holding the powerful accountable. But we need your help to do even more. By subscribing or donating, you'll not only have access to all of our articles, but you'll also be supporting our efforts to hire more writers and expand our coverage. Join us in the fight for truth by subscribing or donating to the Arkansas Times today.

Previous article Clarke Tucker raises more than $500,000 in first quarter Next article Little Rock native among American career diplomats expelled from Russia