South Dakota's Governor Succeeds in Blocking Voter-Approved Marijuana Legalization
The South Dakota Supreme Court ruled that the ballot initiative violated the "single subject" rule for constitutional amendments.

South Dakota voters made history last November by simultaneously approving ballot initiatives aimed at legalizing recreational and medical use of marijuana. The success of the broader initiative, Amendment A, was especially striking because it prevailed by an eight-point margin in a state that is mostly Republican and largely conservative. But thanks to a legal challenge backed by Republican Gov. Kristi Noem, Amendment A was almost immediately tied up in litigation, and last Wednesday the South Dakota Supreme Court definitively overturned it, ruling that the measure violated the "single subject" rule for constitutional amendments.
The court's 4–1 decision does not affect Measure 26, which authorizes medical use of marijuana and passed with support from 70 percent of voters last November. But unless the state legislature independently implements the policy embodied in Amendment A, the ruling means supporters of broader legalization will have to try again next year with an initiative that addresses the court's legal objections.
Article XXIII, Section 1 of the South Dakota Constitution says "a proposed amendment may amend one or more articles and related subject matter in other articles as necessary to accomplish the objectives of the amendment," but "no proposed amendment may embrace more than one subject." According to the South Dakota Supreme Court, that rule aims to "prevent the 'pernicious practice' of combining unrelated provisions in one amendment to ensure passage of a provision that might otherwise fail had the provisions been submitted separately."
The majority accepted that most of Amendment A, including the parts dealing with licensing, regulation, and taxation of cannabis production and distribution, addressed a single subject: the legalization of recreational marijuana for adults 21 or older. But it held that provisions instructing the legislature to authorize medical use of marijuana and cultivation of industrial hemp addressed two additional subjects.
The initiative's backers argued that it complied with the single-subject rule because all of its provisions dealt with the same species of plant. But the court notes that the medical marijuana provision, unlike the recreational marijuana provisions, did not impose a minimum consumption age. The justices also point out that Amendment A itself defines hemp, a nonpsychoactive variety of cannabis with a minimal amount of THC, as distinct from marijuana. They say treating "the regulation of products with a shared biological origin as having the same object or purpose would extend Amendment A into abstraction and obviate the purpose for which Article XXIII, § 1 was adopted."
In the court's view, combining the hemp and medical marijuana provisions with broader legalization improperly forced voters who favored one or both of the narrower changes to approve recreational use as well. That concern seems largely misplaced in the context of last November's election, since South Dakotans could vote against Amendment A while voting for Measure 26, the medical marijuana initiative, as many of them did.
Writing in dissent, Justice Scott Myren notes that "anti-logrolling measures such as a separate vote requirement are not intended to 'prohibit a single constitutional amendment from being complex or multi-faceted, or from containing a variety of specific prescriptions and proscriptions.'" In his view, "it is plain that the Amendment was intended to provide a comprehensive plan for all phases of legalization, regulation, use, production, and sale of marijuana and related substances."
Myren argues that "all of these propositions relate to marijuana or hemp and are 'incidental to and necessarily connected with the object' or purpose of providing a comprehensive plan for all phases of legalization, regulation, use, production, and sale of marijuana and related substances." And while the majority "concludes Amendment A represents precisely the type of logrolling Article XXIII, § 1 forbids," he says, it "makes no assertion that voters were misinformed about or confused by the Amendment."
Because the court concluded that Amendment A violated the single-subject rule, it did not address the question of whether the initiative's provisions were so sweeping that they amounted to a "revision" of the state constitution, which requires a constitutional convention rather than a popular vote. Myren thinks not, but Sixth Judicial Circuit Judge Christina Klinger ruled last February that Amendment A was invalid for that reason as well.
The South Dakota Supreme Court disagreed with Klinger's conclusion that the original plaintiffs in the November 20 lawsuit challenging Amendment A—Pennington County Sheriff Kevin Thom and Col. Rick Miller, superintendent of the South Dakota Highway Patrol—had standing to sue. But the court said Noem, who "ratified the commencement of this lawsuit" via an executive order she issued on January 8, did have standing as governor. Noem's blessing therefore was crucial to the lawsuit's success.
Noem's determination to block Amendment A seemed to be driven more by her anti-pot prejudices than by her commitment to upholding the abstruse rules governing amendments to the state constitution. "I was personally opposed to these measures and firmly believe they're the wrong choice for South Dakota's communities," she said after voters approved the two marijuana initiatives. "We need to be finding ways to strengthen our families, and I think we're taking a step backward in that effort. I'm also very disappointed that we will be growing state government by millions of dollars in costs to public safety and to set up this new regulatory system."
State legislators proved more willing to set aside their personal views on marijuana in deference to the policy preferred by voters. "In my mind, [legalization is] inevitable because we've already seen the support from the public," Senate Majority Leader Gary Cammack said after Klinger's decision. "I didn't vote for recreational marijuana, but my constituents did," added Greg Jamison, another Republican senator. "Rarely do we get a chance to enact a law and not for sure know what our constituents think of that. Here we know."
In response to such comments from members of her own party, Noem threatened to veto any legalization bill the legislature might decide to pass. Noem later suggested she might be open to decriminalizing low-level marijuana possession. Possessing two ounces or less is currently a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a maximum $2,000 fine.
Amendment A's backers criticized the South Dakota Supreme Court's decision, saying there was no evidence that voters were confused about what the initiative would do. "The court has rejected common sense and instead used a far-fetched legal theory to overturn a law passed by over 225,000 South Dakota voters based on no logical or evidentiary support," Matthew Schweich, campaign director at South Dakotans for Better Marijuana Laws, told Marijuana Moment. "The ruling states that Amendment A comprised three subjects—recreational marijuana, medical marijuana, and hemp legalization—and that South Dakotans could not tell what they were voting on when voting for Amendment A. It's a legal stretch and one that relies on the disrespectful assumption that South Dakota voters were intellectually incapable of understanding the initiative."
Schweich's organization is collecting signatures for a 2022 ballot initiative that would legalize recreational marijuana. Meanwhile, the state legislature is expected to consider two legalization bills during its next session, although their fate is uncertain given Noem's opposition.
"South Dakota is a place where the rule of law and our Constitution matter, and that's what today's decision on Amendment A is about," Noem said on Twitter after last week's ruling. "Today's decision does not affect my Administration's implementation of the medical cannabis program voters approved in 2020. That program was launched earlier this month, and the first cards have already gone out to eligible individuals."
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This is the problem with officials who impose their personal preferences on an entire state, like Cuomo.
How dare there be legal challenges to laws, even unconstitutional laws, that you personally like.
Did you apply this same standard to California when it amended it's constitution to traditional marriages only or did you shout with glee when the amendment was challenged and overturned?
This isn't a governor running roughshod over the legal system like Cuomo but (so far) one working within the system. Put forward two new amendments and see what the voters do with the unconsolidated changes.
Government shouldn't have anything to do with drugs or marriages.
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You're right. How did this even get on the ballot?
Well at least he didn't blame Trump for it.
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If I were from S. Dakota, I'd feel kinda hemped in by such narrow thinking!
Not blowing smoke here, but, Holy Smokes, this is TOO much hemping and hawing about the seeds of tiny, petty differences between the pot and the kettle! It all stems from busy-bodies not being able to leaf others alone, marching to their own bong-beats!
Someone needs to Reefer you to a good psychiatrist.
Too cure your madness.
In medieval times, he would have been stoned.
In the old west they would:
Hang em high.
EVERYBODY must get stoned!!!
You’re weeding me out.
I'm tryin' not to Zig-Zag, Man! I'm gettin' 'er all rolled up tight! So let's be buds, and hash this out! Then let's split this joint!
The politicians, voters, and judges need to groove together in a smoke-filled room. If they concentrate hard enough, they will NOT be bowled over, and they can surely hash it all out!
They should all check into a Roach
Motel.
Unlucky Pierre. 🙁
That’s a bummer man.
Don't harsh my buzz, man!
A really simple initiative repealing all statutory provisions making marijuana illegal wouldn't have had this problem. Once it was legal, politicians could (unfortunately) enact their strangulatory regulations without the threat of a veto.
Repeal? Haaaa ha ha ha ha! Nobody does that!
Seriously though, they won't ever do that because they've got to tax it and regulate it.
I’m sure Biden will fix it.
They don't HAVE too.
Libertarian spoiler votes repeal bad laws the same way christianofascist, national socialist and communist spoiler votes get them enacted. This only became possible in 1972, when under 4000 LP votes made Roe v Wade a decision. In 2016 we had 4 million, way more than the gap between fascist and communist Kleptocracy halves. All it takes is enough guts to vote with integrity.
"in 1972, when under 4000 LP votes made Roe v Wade a decision"
Please never stop repeating this. I've read it 10,000 times by now and I'm still not tired of it.
#AbortionAboveAll
#SUPER-PRECEDENT
First I’m hearing it, but I’m glad I did. This whole time I thought the Supreme Court made that decision.
Thanks Hank, always happy to learn something new.
The Supreme court copied it from the LP. The Dem/GOP platforms that election made no mention. See "Canadian Liberals and American Libertarians" or "Libertarian Women's Rights 1972-76"
Trumperjugend-Sockenpuppen here helps me convince the LP that its 2018 "import uninspected Saracen berserker terrorists" repels voters the same way abandoning the original women's rights plank drove women away from the LP and into the arms of looter parties. With friends like these...
Some day you’ll explain this.
That day was in February 2007, when I published "The Case for Voting Libertarian." Bilingual, with audio: (https://tinyurl.com/y3atpacy) The other Gary Johnson ran it on an Austin TX TV show "Live and Let Live," covering how 1.4% of the vote took 11 election campaigns to make the 18th Amendment, with 16A not all that different. Back before 1972 NOBODY EVER had a chance to vote to repeal bad laws and amendments except in 1932, when the Liberal Party donated its repeal plank to the Dems. Search "spoiler vote clout". Search "The 25% v: Social Pressure" for why this works to change laws.
OMG. That essay is surprisingly brilliant. All this time I figured you for a ranting fool.
You do rant, you can be occasionally foolish, but it’s clear you have brilliance.
Thank you for answering and clearing it up. Amazing what so few votes accomplished.
Be nice if they'd apply that rule to legislation.
It’s different when polititions do it, somehow
It’s different when some politicians do it.
“If you like laws and sausages, you should never watch either one being made.” - Otto von Bismarck
And you definitely love both, don’t you, you little whore.
Funny how the rules never apply to the aristocracy.
They will if enough of them lose because Libertarian votes covered the gap. See "Getting their Attention With Spoiler Votes"
Each Drug War victory is 'limited government conservatism' in action! Noem is right; if we strengthen our families enough, we won't even need freedom. Most people are too busy working to enjoy freedom and the remainder wouldn't know what to do with it, even if they had it.
Besides, everyone knows that if you give the potheads an 'in,' the state will be flooded with fentanyl-laced grass! It's the cartels' newest and most profitable business model.
Hopefully, this precedent will motivate limited government conservatives to use similar legal maneuvering to overturn the recreational alcohol laws that have crippled our families, killed our children and poisoned our cities for decades!
White lightning’s still the greatest thrill of all.
One of these days I'm gonna build a still. Get some 6-row barley and turn corn into shine.
Do it!
Not while I live in an apartment.
Not while I live in an
apartment.cardboard box.All you need is corn sugar and glucose (OK, water). Just about 96% of all alcohol consumed in These States during Religious National Prohibition was made from Fleischmann's yeast and glucose corn sugar. Even the beer the Capone brothers produced was mady by buying wort from the likes of the Atlas Brewing Company, adding bags of pure corn sugar and coming back three days later to high-octane brewsky. Even federal cop Ness and Prohibition Administrator Doran admitted as much.
If I do this I won't make crap. I'll use the skills I learned from making my own beer and convert starches (barley, corn, potatoes, rice...) into sugar. Then ferment that. Maybe toss some charred oak chips in to mimic barrel aging, or keep some of the head and tail for flavor.
It's just a pipe dream right now. Regardless one thing is for sure. I would NEVER sell it. If I got caught, I'd rather be caught as a hobby distiller than someone selling booze without paying taxes.
Nobody believes sarc’s gonna do this.
Did you meet him on Craigslist?
Paigslist
There used to be this really crazy site called hihnslist ….
He meant Owsley's White Lightnin'!
No, I meant George Jones’ “mighty mighty pleasin’’” white lightning. 🙂
I meant Merle Haggard
That already happened. See "The Alabama Citizen" in Google News Archive. Result was Great Depression, 72% increase in suicides and 700% increase in communist party membership. Then again, on a long enough timeline, the survival rate converges on zero.
The rat race always ends in a dead heat.
Infantile inability to value differences proves once again to identify infantile IQs.
And TDS-addled pieces of shit.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
It's the same thing that an all-Democrat Florida Supreme Court in 2000 (the same one that kept overruling clear provisions of Florida election law in an effort to deliver the state to Gore) did to the Florida Civil Rights Initiative. "You're going to ban racial discrimination in all of public employment, public education, and public contracting? Yeah, we're declaring that that's three different subjects."
It is... "Public Contracting" of??? Private business?
The people have spoken. Fuck the politicians.
Dibs on Noem
How do hemp and marijuana work against the strengthening of families?
Like this
Cops imagine or fabricate that they smell hemp, kick in door, shoot everyone inside, asset forfeiture confiscate contents and evade murder rap via qualified immunity. No more family. Q.E.D. If you voted GOP or Dem, THIS is what your vote got you.
"Q.E.D. If you voted GOP or Dem, THIS is what your vote got you."
Infantile inability to value differences proves once again to identify infantile IQs.
And TDS-addled pieces of shit.
When one mixes in some Xbox, it can. But it is tradition. And cuts into brewery profits. So evil.
Though the outcome is horseshit, I would have appreciated this sort of constitutional provision concerning more than 1 subject about 15 years ago, as a bunch of religious fundamentalist fuckheads included common law marriage in with a gay marriage limitation. It was fucking absurd.
I'd like to know more about that.
OK, my $100 says National Socialist Christianofascist girl-bullying brainwashee of Republican MAGA race suicide televangelism, down to the Enabling Act to nullify attempted democratic meddling. Do I hear a taker with a better, verifiable hypothesis?
Huh?
He's insane. Ignore him.
“Do I hear a taker with a better, verifiable hypothesis?”
Kristi Noem doesn’t like marijuana.
You know who else was more motivated by personal prejudices than by a desire to uphold established constitutional law?
Abraham Lincoln?
Every elected official ever?
I'm thinking someone needs to get primaried.
In 7…..5…..3….2….
2?!
Social conservatives and socialists: two peas in a pod when it comes to restricting peoples' liberty because in their minds "it's good for them".
Sad to see the governor pandering to the prison/enforcement/court complex who'd rather keep running people through the system for smoking pot to earn a good living instead of actually dealing with criminals. I'll bet they contribute to her campaigns.
We have seen a ton of authoritarianism from the Democrats in the last couple of years on Covid lockdowns and vaccine mandates.
S. Dakota is now subject to Republican form of authoritarianism with this act.
Republicans have been authoritarians and war mongers for decades. However, Democrats have become so bad that even Republicans seem preferable. A—holes like Bush almost seem tolerable in comparison to Obama and Biden. Though McCain still is exemplary of the kind of psychopath that should be beyond the pale in any decent society.
Obama and Biden didn't start any wars based on lies. Didn't pass any Patriot Acts. Didn't make torture official US criminal justice policy. Didn't plunge the world into a major recession. Didn't turn the US into a hated joke. You just don't like their tax policy.
Lybia? Yemen? Syria?
Those are names of countries, I believe.
Obama and Biden didn't start any wars based on lies.
Debatable. But in any case, you won't see anyone on here defending Bush. "Almost tolerable" in comparison to another awful president is not an endorsement.
Perhaps a bit less hyperventilating and a lot more parsing of the facts, though with the 'liberal' in your handle, it seems a gamble.
That's the problem with a one-subject rule: it's subjectivity. Look at the 15th Amendment as an example. It can be viewed as being anywhere from 1 to 8 subjects, depending on how you read it (I get to 8 by counting "race, color, or previous condition of servitude" as 3 subjects, Congressional enforcement authority as a fourth, and then doubling because the amendment's prohibitions apply to voting restrictions by "the United States or by any State."
Agreed; Good job, good insight!
GOP 'tards are not unknown; add another to the list.
Fuck Kristi Noem.
Would. And very roughly.
You can already hear the crowd chanting...
"That's risky Boehm!"?
"One frisky ovum!"?
"Nice nifty poem!"?
"Wish she would blow 'em!"?
It’s fascinating that outlawing a drug can be done at the a of pen, while using that law supposedly requires a constitutional convention.
If this kind of conservative authoritarianism is the answer to progressive authoritarianism, conservatives and libertarians are going to lose.
One subject per amendment? Ok, make the next one a complete revocation of all state government jurisdiction over any form of commerce in South Dakota. Drugs, food, sex, whatever.
Fuck you, Kristi.
-jcr
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Yeah, so, Supreme Courts, State and Federal, seem to all miss something on regards to their role. The entire point of the 3 branch Representative Democracy is to ensure a check on power is maintained to avoid one branch (or individual within a branch) from exceeding the limits of their Constitutional powers and authorities, albeit mandates be damned (but that's for another rant). This check on power was one of the mechanisms baked into the Constitutional cake to prevent a government from diverging away from the collective will of the citizens of the United States, and create a means to correct any actions taken by governments which is inconsistent with our basic core Democratic system.
However, that point seems to have been lost somewhere along the way between 1776 and 2021. The formal mechanisms spelled out in the Constitution which are the cornerstones of these checks and balances for each branch of government have been perverted in their actual use. While it's not clear who fired the first proverbial shot, they have been weapononized as political tools for use by one part against the other.
When a Supreme Court ruling is made, if the decisions laid out in the ruling directly conflict with a standing law which was approved by the legislature, or a regulation which was written by an executive branch agency which was delegated that authority by the legislature, the Supreme Court rulings are the binding authority and the laws or regulations are deemed moot. That's exactly what the checks and balances are supposed to look like, with the Supreme Court's checks and balances mandate (not authority as an option) reaching to both of the other branches.
With that said, let's talk about why this ruling is, in my humble opinion, a perversion of this authority, and actually inconsistent with Representative Democracy, but the very foundation of Democracy it is built upon. That foundation is a remarkably simple, albeit profound concept, and is the very element which needs to be protected. Democracy is a government which operates and takes actions based on the will of the people, as determined by a formal ballot collection from every single citizen. With history teaching the founding fathers that pure Democracy was not resilient when applied at the national scale, we ended up with a modified version which gives citizens the right to have a say in who gets designated as a representative by casting a ballot. However, mostly at the State and local government levels, for a myriad of reasons, certain decisions regarding law enactment, taxation adjustments, or punitive actions towards an elected official, are decided by a simple majority vote by the voting citizens through the process of referendum. From where I stand, referendums, and the implications stemming from their outcomes, should be considered the absolute authority above all other governmental functions, as they represent the direct will of the people. Only another referendum with the majority of votes indicating the will of the people to eliminate this law, should have the power to repeal, amend, or indirectly molest the authority of that law.
The Constitutional mandate which was cited by the justices in this case restricting amendments to the State Constitution to a single action is a means to ensure that amendments are segregated from each other to avoid ambiguities and prevent any confusion by those government officials implementing and enforcing them. Combining the medical and recreational decriminalization of marijuana was nothing more than a clerical error, and not an overreacting government official or branch. The Supreme Court's checks and balances mandate extends to the Legislative and Executive branches of the government, and no further. As the citizens of this state are in no way part of any of the 3 branches of government and not a branch of government in any form, when the people collectivly decide on any measure, if the decisions of any Supreme Court ruling conflicts with the will of the people, the will of the people should be the dominant authority and make moot the elements of that ruling. The Supreme Court's decision to simply overrule the will of the people and take it upon themselves to pick and choose which measure they want to include as an amendment and just discard the measures they don't want is a miscarriage of the most basic core fundamentals of Democracy's empowerment of the people, and a spectacular overreach of the court's authorities and roles in the government, and frankly a betrayal of the citizens they serve.
If the Constitution mandates only one specific issue can be addressed in each Amendment, you make two Amendments. The fact that this is being considered two separate issues, medical and recreational use of marijuana, is not even a valid assertion. Marijuana decriminalization is in and of itself a single subject, even if medical is lawful but recreational is not. What are they going to insist on next, a separate amendment for each day of the week?
The popular vote on the amendment was administered by a government entity pursuant to a constitutionally specified process, so why wouldn't the court's mandate extend to that?
Weed is bad for you! Why don't you take a long, deep lungful of COVID instead?
--Governor Noem
This Omicron is some dank ass shit, yo.
*COUGH* *COUGH* *COUGH* *Passes to the right*
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How small government of her. Nothing like blatantly disrespecting the wishes of your constituents.
Too funny.
She’s SAVING FAMILIES!!!
So much for the sane alternative to DeSantis and the charismatic alternative to Abbott. Who else do the Reps have?
It may not take much with Biden/Harris/Warren/Sanders/Buttigieg as the great Dem hopes.
If Kristi Noem desires to win future elections beyond SD, she'd be wise to endorse legalizing recreational weed in SD (via either/both by legislation and/or another voter referendum.
We need Republicans who support freedom and free markets (not those who continue to support Joe Biden's War on Illegal Drugs).
She's still hot, but I wouldn't vote for her.
With dope there’s hope. With booze you lose. You heard it here first. ????
So the court is saying taxpayers have not wasted enough money and can do it again.
I'm just happy to see it being wheeled into the State Authority instead of the ever-growing National 'feds' authority. No matter which way the State of S.C. end up.
So NJ's Constitution doesn't pass the test ? '....The Legislature shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of free public schools for the instruction of all the children in the State between the ages of five and eighteen years....'
Of course not. According to the dimwits on that Court, that amendment deals with multiple subjects of Reading Writing and Arithmetic so I guess S.D. would have to pass 47 separate amendments if they want to do something about education?
You resent the hell out of the fact that many other people are flat-out, better, more honest people than you are, right? More “live and let live”, and WAAAY less authoritarian?
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/in-love-and-war/201706/why-some-people-resent-do-gooders
From the conclusion to the above…
These findings suggest that we don’t need to downplay personal triumphs to avoid negative social consequences, as long as we make it clear that we don’t look down on others as a result.
SQRLSY back here now… So, I do NOT want you to feel BAD about YOU being an asshole, and me NOT being one! PLEASE feel GOOD about you being an asshole! You do NOT need to push me (or other REAL lovers of personal liberty) down, so that you can feel better about being an asshole! EVERYONE ADORES you for being that asshole that you are, because, well, because you are YOU! FEEL that self-esteem, now!
^This.
Go for straight-up legalization. Re-draft and vote again. Do it right.
Governor Noem was well within her rights to challenge the initiative under SD state law. She knew the rules. The drafters thought they could slide one by. No dice.
Make me, punk!
I’m soooo sorry that your Great Whitish-Orangish Pumpkin-Father has been CHEATED out of His Office by evil Demoncrats! I suggest that you might be able to retreat to your safe space… I hear they have laid in a large supply of Teddy Bears. Maybe one of the Teddy Bears will agree to lay with you, and snuggle your wuggle for a while! There, there!
In a mere few more years, as you are still jonesing for Great White Father, I bet you could persuade Alex Jones to be your Next Savior! Slogan: Jonesing for Jones!
Fizzled-Dizzled can’t be abidin’ with Biden, and settling for merely getting her hair smelled. Fizzled-Dizzled wants to get back to having her pussy grabbed good and hard, by Der TrumpfenFuhrer!
And probably they were also afraid to put both a medical and a recreational amendment on the ballot, figuring the voters would take them as in competition or some sort of choice between them rather than as each against status quo, and therefore might vote for just medical.
Made me lol.
'Moonshine,' the stuff one can buy in the cutesy mason jar at the liquor store...
But not enough coddling and Karening.
You could have simply stopped at 'Tony's too stupid.'
What are you lying about now? South Dakota has consistently been in top 5 Covid death rates per capita.
Considering Trump got fewer votes than Hillary, I think you're engaging in fuzzy math.