Illinois Voters Approve Marijuana Legalization Ballot Measure
Voters in the largest county in Illinois overwhelmingly approved a ballot question calling for the legalization of marijuana on Tuesday.
The measure in Cook County -- the nation's second-most-populous county -- is not binding, but its passage sends a strong message to state lawmakers that ending cannabis prohibition is an issue that voters want the legislature to address.
With 75 percent of precincts reporting, the question was ahead by a greater than two-to-one margin.
It reads:
"Shall the State of Illinois legalize the cultivation, manufacture, distribution, testing, and sale of marijuana and marijuana products for recreational use by adults 21 and older subject to state regulation, taxation and local ordinance?"
Statewide, voters also went to the polls on Tuesday to select party
nominees for governor and attorney general, contests in which the
candidates' positions on marijuana legalization has been a key issue.
The Associated Press projected that JB Pritzker won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. During the course of the campaign, he promised to legalize cannabis.
“I also support legalizing and taxing recreational use of marijuana, which is estimated to generate as much as $700 million a year for the state," he
said. "No more studies are needed to show it’s time for Illinois to safely move forward and legalize marijuana. As governor, I will modernize drug laws and move Illinois towards a criminal justice system that gives all Illinoisans a chance to reach their full potential."
“Criminalizing marijuana hasn’t made our communities safer, but has disproportionately impacted black and brown communities," Pritzker also said. "The criminalization of cannabis never has been and never will be enforced fairly, and it’s time to bring that to an end. To right past wrongs, we also have to commute sentences of people in prison who are there for marijuana offenses.”
Voters across Illinois may get a chance to weigh in on marijuana legalization in November. Earlier this month, the Senate
approved legislation for a nonbinding statewide ballot question on the issue, which is now pending in the House.
In recent months lawmakers have also held a series of hearings on legislation that would end cannabis prohibition without referring the question to voters, but leaders have not yet scheduled House or Senate votes.
While incumbent Gov. Bruce Rauner (R) signed into law a measure to decriminalize cannabis possession last year, he opposes broader legalization. The issue is sure to be a focus of debate as the general election approaches.