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Tag: Florida recreational marijuana

  • Uthmeier wants recreational pot amendment rejected

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    Attorney General James Uthmeier and two major business groups have urged the Florida Supreme Court to reject a proposed recreational-marijuana constitutional amendment, arguing it is misleading and conflicts with federal law.

    Uthmeier, the Florida Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries of Florida filed briefs Friday as the Supreme Court prepares to make a pivotal decision about whether the proposed constitutional amendment meets legal tests to go on the November ballot.

    The political committee Smart & Safe Florida is sponsoring the proposal, which would allow people age 21 and older to use recreational marijuana. In addition to needing Supreme Court approval, Smart & Safe Florida must meet petition signature requirements by Feb. 1.

    The Supreme Court is not supposed to consider the merits of proposed constitutional amendments but looks at issues such as whether wording is clear and whether proposals improperly deal with multiple subjects.

    The brief filed by Uthmeier’s office called the pot proposal “fatally flawed.”

    “It misleads voters in a way designed to garner greater approval, is flatly invalid under the federal Constitution and violates the single-subject requirement,” the attorney general’s brief said. “The (Supreme) Court should therefore strike the proposed amendment from the ballot.”

    Uthmeier, who was then Gov. Ron DeSantis’ chief of staff, and the Chamber of Commerce were among leading opponents of a similar proposed constitutional amendment sponsored in 2024 by Smart & Safe Florida. The amendment fell short of receiving the required 60 percent voter approval to pass, leading Smart & Safe Florida to try again to pass an amendment in 2026.

    In a statement Monday, Smart & Safe Florida pushed back against the opponents’ new briefs.

    “In 2024, the Florida Supreme Court rejected nearly identical arguments, upheld a virtually identical amendment and again provided a clear roadmap for ballot approval,” the statement said. “We followed the Court’s guidance, and we anticipate they will again follow Florida law and approve the current ballot language. 5.9 million voters approved of the measure in 2024, and over a million Florida voters have signed petitions to put the current language on the ballot, we hope their voices won’t be ignored.”

    Uthmeier’s office and the business groups contend the proposal is misleading because of an issue about where smoking and vaping marijuana would be barred.

    The proposed ballot summary — the wording voters would see when they go to the polls — says smoking and vaping would be prohibited “in public.” But the opponents contend that conflicts with the detailed text of the amendment, which says smoking and vaping in “any public place” would be prohibited. The text provides a definition of “public place” that includes numerous places such as parks, beaches, roads, sidewalks, schools, arenas and government buildings.

    The opponents argue that the part of the text about barring smoking in public places is narrower than the summary’s description of a ban on smoking in “public” — potentially leading to voters being misled about the effects of the amendment.

    “The ballot summary would lead voters to believe that voting yes would ensure there is no marijuana — or its smell — ‘in public,’ while the actual amendment delivers no such thing,” Uthmeier’s office argued. “The ‘in public’ summary language would likewise deceive Florida parents into thinking this initiative will prohibit marijuana smoking near their children in hotels, restaurants, sports venues, and other areas open to the general public. The initiative provides no such protection.”

    The briefs filed by Uthmeier’s office and the business groups and another brief filed by the Drug Free America Foundation also contend the Supreme Court should block the proposal because marijuana remains illegal under federal law. Pointing to what is known as the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution, the briefs contend federal law would effectively trump a change to the state Constitution allowing recreational marijuana.

    “Federal law criminalizes the acquisition, cultivation, processing, transportation, and sale of marijuana,” said the Chamber of Commerce brief, which was joined by the Florida Legal Foundation and former state appellate Judge Frank Shepherd. “The proposed constitutional initiative would allow it.”

    The Supreme Court considered arguments about potential conflicts with federal law before allowing the 2024 recreational-marijuana amendment to go before voters. The court’s main opinion said that for such a challenge to succeed, “we must find that a law would be unconstitutional in all of its applications. We decline to make that broad finding here. A detailed analysis of the potential conflict between sections of this (proposed 2024) amendment and federal law is a task far afield from the core purpose of this … proceeding under the Florida Constitution.”

    Five justices approved allowing the 2024 amendment to go on the ballot, with four signing on to the main opinion. Two justices dissented.

    Smart & Safe Florida faces a Jan. 12 deadline for filing arguments at the Supreme Court.

    The political committee also must submit at least 880,062 valid petition signatures to the state by Feb. 1. While it indicated in Monday’s statement it had collected more than 1 million signatures, the state Division of Elections website showed 675,307 valid signatures had been tallied.

    Smart & Safe Florida last week filed a lawsuit in Leon County circuit court alleging state elections officials had improperly directed the invalidation of about 72,000 signatures.

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    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida

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  • DeSantis administration is interfering with new recreational pot amendment, lawsuit alleges

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    Credit: Shutterstock

    The organizers behind an amendment to legalize marijuana in Florida contend that the administration of Gov. Ron DeSantis is interfering with their efforts to make the 2026 ballot and they have asked a court to stop it.

    Smart & Safe Florida, the political committee sponsoring the amendment and which is largely supported by Trulieve, a medical marijuana company, last week filed a lawsuit over an effort by state election officials to toss out as many as 200,000 signatures for the initiative. They call the actions by Secretary of State Cord Byrd, appointed by DeSantis, “unlawful” and unprecedented. 

    Smart & Safe needs to collect more than 880,000 signatures to make the ballot. The new lawsuit points out that Maria Matthews, head of the Division Elections, told local supervisors to throw out signed and validated signatures because Smart & Safe Florida did not provide the people it reached out to by mail with a copy of the entire amendment.  

    Matthew’s edict to toss the signatures came after Byrd in March advised Smart & Safe Florida that the petition it was mailing voters and asking them to return wasn’t valid because it didn’t contain the wording of the amendment. 

    The group began including the full language following Byrd’s correspondence and also provided Byrd with the names of all those who returned forms to it by mail.

    Nevertheless, the suit calls Matthews’ actions unlawful. 

    “Smart & Safe filed this lawsuit to require the Secretary of State to follow Florida law and to prevent the state from denying the Florida voters who signed the petition to have their voices,” the group said through a spokesperson.

    “We are asking the court to enforce Florida law, it’s really that simple. In this matter in an unprecedented directive the Secretary of State’s office ordered all local supervisors of elections to invalidate upwards of 200,000 lawfully gathered petitions that have already been reviewed and certified by the local supervisors. The state is wrongly attempting to change the rules after the fact and deny these registered voters their voice in the process.”

    Under Florida law, those seeking to place an initiative on the ballot have until Feb. 1 to gather the signatures they need. The latest figures posted by the Department of State show that organizers have collected more than 662,000 already.

    Smart & Safe Florida is the same group that tried unsuccessfully to get pot legalized in 2024 but the amendment fell short of the 60% threshold needed for approval.

    The 200,000 tossed signatures may not be the only legal obstacle the new proposed amendment to legalize marijuana is facing.

    Politico Florida reports that Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has not sent the proposed amendment to the Florida Supreme Court for review, despite the organizers having collected enough signatures to trigger that action.

    Meanwhile, the legal challenge over the second pot amendment coincides with a Leon County grand jury’s probe into a $10 million Medicaid payment made to the Hope Florida Foundation, an initiative spearheaded by First Lady Casey DeSantis designed to help transition people off  Medicaid and other social service programs. 

    Hope Florida subsequently directed the money to two groups that donated millions to the campaign to defeat the 2024 amendment to legalize recreational  pot for adults.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    Organizers behind the amendment call the actions by Secretary of State Cord Byrd, appointed by DeSantis, ‘unlawful’ and unprecedented

    The 16-year-old dual Palestinian-American citizen from Brevard County has been held in an Israeli prison for more than eight months

    It’s the largest proposed change so far to Florida immigration laws ahead of the 2026 session



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    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix
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  • Committee aiming to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida raises over $100 million

    Committee aiming to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida raises over $100 million

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    A political committee leading efforts to pass a constitutional amendment to allow recreational use of marijuana raised slightly more than $6 million from Sept. 7 through Sept. 13 and has raised $100 million since being formed in 2022, according to a newly filed finance report.

    The Smart & Safe Florida committee raised $6,001,782 during the week-long period, while spending $9,333,207. It had about $28.5 million in cash on hand as of Sept. 13, the report posted on the state Division of Elections website shows.

    The Trulieve cannabis company contributed $5 million during the period. As of Sept. 13, Trulieve had made $92.77 million in cash and in-kind contributions to the committee since 2022. Another cannabis company, Curaleaf, Inc., contributed $1 million to the committee during the week-long period.

    Overall, Smart & Safe Florida had raised $100,751,446 in cash and $607,381 in in-kind contributions since 2022, the report shows.

    The proposed constitutional amendment, which will appear on the November ballot as Amendment 3, says, in part, that it would allow “adults 21 years or older to possess, purchase, or use marijuana products and marijuana accessories for non-medical personal consumption by smoking, ingestion, or otherwise.”

    Voters in 2016 passed a constitutional amendment that allowed medical marijuana.

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    News Service of Florida

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  • Florida Gov. DeSantis defends targeting marijuana petition workers

    Florida Gov. DeSantis defends targeting marijuana petition workers

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    While supporters of proposed constitutional amendments face stringent requirements for gathering petition signatures, Gov. Ron DeSantis contends additional steps could be needed.

    As he crusades against proposals on the November ballot that would allow recreational use of marijuana and enshrine abortion rights in the state Constitution, DeSantis this week suggested more anti-fraud measures are needed.

    “There’s a lot of money that’s at stake here,” DeSantis said Monday during an appearance in Orlando. “People make money off the petition process. There’s an incentive to commit fraud. The Legislature tried to address it, but I don’t think that they’ve addressed it adequately.”

    Backers of proposed constitutional amendments had to submit at least 891,523 valid petition signatures to get initiatives on this year’s ballot.

    The Republican-controlled Legislature and DeSantis in recent years have banned a longstanding practice of paying petition gatherers based on the number of signatures they collect. They also have required petition forms to include information identifying petition gatherers, who are required to register with the state.

    DeSantis’ comment came as he responded to a question about the recent arrest of a petition gatherer amid an investigation by the state’s Office of Election Crimes and Security.

    Last week, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement announced that Colton Brady, 34 of Fayetteville, Ga., was arrested Sept. 5 on eight counts of petition fraud crimes, including criminal use of a dead person’s information and submitting false voter registration information.

    An agency news release said Brady’s arrest was tied to “petition fraud on the personal use of marijuana initiative” and that Brady submitted 71 invalid forms.

    But the Smart & Safe Florida political committee, which is leading efforts to pass this year’s recreational-marijuana initiative, said Brady wasn’t part of their ballot drive, despite the possible inference by the state agency. The committee said Brady collected signatures for another marijuana measure. The Smart & Safe initiative will appear on the November ballot as Amendment 3.

    “That initiative (involving Brady) was completely separate and independent from Amendment 3 and these signatures were not related to Amendment 3,” Smart & Safe Florida said in a statement. “This individual was never paid by Smart & Safe Florida nor do we have any record of affiliation with him.”

    DeSantis backed the FDLE announcement as “accurate.”

    “This was somebody who had submitted fraudulent petitions, I think, during the 2022 (election) cycle. That’s a fraud. I mean, we’re not going to turn our backs on that,” DeSantis said.

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    Jim Turner, the News Service of Florida

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  • DeSantis official criticizes Florida’s Amendment 3 for not including ‘home-grow’

    DeSantis official criticizes Florida’s Amendment 3 for not including ‘home-grow’

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    Ron DeSantis has made it clear that he opposes Amendment 3, the proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot this fall in Florida to legalize recreational use of cannabis for adults 21 and older.

    But a member of his staff offered a novel argument to oppose the measure on social media on Tuesday: that the measure does not allow for “home grow,” or the ability for individuals to grow their own supply of marijuana.

    “So here’s the thing: Amendment 3 would create a monopoly on recreational,” Christina Pushaw wrote on X. “It also doesn’t allow home growing. Why is it that other states that have passed recreational marijuana also allow individuals to home grow, but Florida’s Amendment 3 specifically does NOT? It’s not about ‘freedom,’ it’s corporate greed.”

    Of the 24 states that have legalized the adult-use marijuana market, only three maintain criminal prohibitions on home cultivation, according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). A number of cannabis activists have called for allowing home grow ever since medical marijuana was approved by voters in Florida in 2016, and some have complained that Amendment 3 wouldn’t allow that.

    The Libertarian Party of Florida endorsed Amendment 3 last month, but in a statement said that while it “is a commendable advance, it does not go far enough.”

    “We must continue to advocate for the right to homegrown cannabis, allowing Floridians to cultivate their own plants for personal use,” said Matthew Johnson, the party’s vice chair and communications committee chair.

    Kim Rivers, CEO of Trulieve, the biggest marijuana company in Florida, which has spent more than $60 million to try to get Amendment 3 passed, responded to Pushaw on X by saying, “Great news — it looks like @GovRonDeSantis supports home grow in Florida per his spokesperson!”

    Rivers went on to say that particular provision could not be included due to a Florida Constitution provision permitting only a single subject to be mentioned in the text of the amendment — a fact she said DeSantis and his team are aware of.

    “[T]his is absolutely something we can support via implementation in the legislature and with the Governors support we can get it done!” she added.

    When other individuals chimed in and criticized Trulieve for allegedly opposing legalization of home-grown cannabis in Florida because it would hurt the company’s own bottom line, Rivers insisted that wasn’t the case.

    “We have supported home grow in every market we do business is,” she wrote on X. “We sell clones in those markets that allow it. In Florida we have carried petitions and contributed to home grow amendments. We see it as a market expansion not a challenge!”

    The single-subject rule

    This is what Article XI, Section 3 of the Florida Constitution says regarding the single-subject rule:

    “The power to propose the revision or amendment of any portion or portions of this constitution by initiative is reserved to the people, provided that, any such revision or amendment, except for those limiting the power of government to raise revenue, shall embrace but one subject and matter directly connected therewith.”

    “It seems to me that the DeSantis administration is really reaching deep in their playbook and coming up short,” said Chris Cano, executive director of the Suncoast Chapter of NORML. “I’ve heard that talking point [by critics] long before DeSantis even chose to inject himself into the whole Amendment 3 and hemp industry battle.”

    Cano referred to the fact that hemp companies, grateful for DeSantis’ veto of a bill that would have influenced their industry, have begun contributing financially to efforts to bring down Amendment 3.

    “For those in the hemp industry against Amendment 3, that has been a frequent talking point,” he said, adding, “It’s an ignorant one because of Florida’s single-subject rule makes amendments what they are. It’s just a red herring we’ve heard since the amendment qualified via the Florida Supreme Court.”

    In 2018, Tampa adult club entrepreneur Joe Redner filed a lawsuit in state court arguing he should be able to grow marijuana to obtain a sufficient quality of specific cannabinoids that he needed to treat his diagnosis of stage 4 lung cancer, according to court documents.

    A Leon County circuit judge ruled that he should be able to do so, but the Florida Department of Health appealed to the First District Court of Appeal, which blocked the circuit judge’s ruling from taking effect. The Florida Supreme Court declined to take the case up in November 2019.

    Morgan Hill, a spokesperson for Smart & Safe, the political committee advocating for the passage of Amendment 3, said she has heard questions not only about home grown from individuals curious about why it wasn’t included in the ballot language, but also for the retroactive decriminalization of possession of cannabis.

    “It’s because the Florida requirements are different than they are in other states for ballot measures,” she said. “Our position has been the same from the beginning. You should ask the governor’s team and Christina what she thinks.”

    Money fight

    Keep Florida Clean, a political committee formed to oppose Amendment 3, has raised more than $12 million to date, with most of that coming from Miami hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin. Gov. DeSantis’ Florida Freedom Fund PAC as well as the Republican Party of Florida are also raising money to oppose the measure.

    Amendment 3 needs 60% support from the voting public to become the law. While several polls have shown the measure drawing beyond that threshold, a Florida Atlantic University survey published last week showed it getting 56%, a majority but not the margin needed for victory.

    Pushaw previously worked as a spokesperson for the governor’s office. After leaving to work on his presidential campaign last year, she now is listed in state records as a senior management analyst in the executive office of the governor.

    The Phoenix reached out to the governor’s press office for comment but did not receive an immediate response.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Diane Rado for questions: [email protected]. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.

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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix

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  • Trulieve adds another $5 million to effort to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida

    Trulieve adds another $5 million to effort to legalize recreational marijuana in Florida

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    The medical-cannabis company Trulieve has contributed another $5 million to a campaign to allow recreational marijuana in Florida, according to a newly filed finance report.

    The company made the contribution July 15 to the Smart & Safe Florida political committee, which is leading efforts to pass a recreational-marijuana initiative on the November ballot.

    In all, Trulieve had contributed about $60.39 million to the committee as of July 19, according to a state Division of Elections database.

    The committee had raised a total of $66.475 million in cash and nearly $129,000 in in-kind contributions. It had spent $53.963 million.

    The initiative, which will appear on the ballot as Amendment 3, says, in part, that it would allow “adults 21 years or older to possess, purchase, or use marijuana products and marijuana accessories for non-medical personal consumption by smoking, ingestion, or otherwise.”

    Voters in 2016 passed a constitutional amendment that allowed medical marijuana.

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    News Service of Florida

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