After Approving Medical Marijuana 5 Years Ago, Oklahoma Voters Reject Broader Legalization
A ballot initiative that would have allowed recreational use was defeated by a large margin in a special election.

Oklahoma voters, who approved medical marijuana by a 14-point margin in 2018, yesterday declined to go further, rejecting a ballot measure that would have allowed recreational use and authorized state-licensed businesses to serve that market. State Question 820, which was the only thing on the ballot in most counties during this special election, was opposed by 62 percent of voters. The initiative, which originally was proposed for last November's ballot but was delayed by a legal challenge, would have made Oklahoma the 22nd state to legalize recreational marijuana.
"We're pleased and excited that Oklahomans recognize the dangers of marijuana to our kids, to our families," Pat McFerron, a spokesman for the opposition campaign, told KFOR, the NBC affiliate in Oklahoma City. "What [voters] said was, 'We don't want to go further. We've seen the ills of unfettered marijuana use in our state. We've heard those stories from other places, and we don't want to travel down that road.'"
Ryan Kiesel, a spokesman for the Yes on 820 campaign, promised that the fight for legalization would continue. "This is not the end of the effort to end prohibition in the state of Oklahoma," he said. "This is halftime."
The initiative would have eliminated civil and criminal penalties for adults 21 or older who publicly possess an ounce or less of marijuana. It also would have allowed home cultivation, limited to six mature plants and six seedlings, and private possession of the marijuana produced by those plants.
Recreational sales would have been subject to a 15 percent excise tax, which a report commissioned by the Question 820 campaign estimated would yield more than $100 million in revenue each year. Commercial licenses initially would have been limited to existing medical marijuana growers and retailers. After two years, additional suppliers could have applied for licenses. Local governments would have been allowed to regulate retailers but not ban them or cap their number, and they would have received a share of tax revenue based on sales in their jurisdictions.
While marijuana arrests fell dramatically after Oklahoma legalized medical use in 2018, a report from Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform noted that police still busted 4,500 people for pot possession in 2020. The group said more than 60,000 Oklahomans have cannabis-related criminal records, many of which could have been cleared under Question 820, which would have authorized people to seek expungements of marijuana convictions involving conduct that was no longer illegal.
"This was about keeping Oklahomans out of the criminal justice system," Kiesel said. "The idea that you cannot get into the criminal justice system for marijuana in the state of Oklahoma is not based in reality at all."
Oklahoma's Republican governor, Kevin Stitt, opposed Question 820 based on a curious mixture of arguments. Last month he said legalizing recreational use was "a bad idea" because cannabis is still prohibited by federal law and "the feds need to make a decision about marijuana." At the same time, Stitt noted that "we already have medical marijuana to help the sick or the people that need it for pain relief," a policy that likewise conflicts with the federal ban.
It was also a bit odd that Stitt, who a year ago said Oklahoma voters had been tricked into legalizing medical marijuana by a "misleading" ballot initiative, was suddenly touting his state's compassion for patients. In any case, he worried that "marijuana is bad for young people."
Sen. James Lankford (R–Okla.) raised the same concern. "Oklahoma has seen marijuana use skyrocket, hurting our communities and families," he tweeted last week. "Protect our kids by voting NO on March 7 on State Question 820 to protect our state from a dramatic increase of Marijuana sales."
Despite the implication that legalizing marijuana for adults would increase underage use, that fear has yet to materialize in states that have approved medical or recreational use. In Oklahoma, past-month marijuana use by high school seniors rose a bit between 2017–18 and 2019–20, but the rate was still below the national average for 12th-graders in the Monitoring the Future Survey.
According to the most recent estimates from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, past-month marijuana use by Oklahoma residents 12 or older rose more sharply than the national average between 2017–18 and 2018–19. That rate likewise remained below the national average.
According to data cited by the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control, "treatment admissions" involving marijuana fell from more than 3,000 in 2018 to fewer than 2,000 in 2020—a 25 percent drop. That coincided with the decline in marijuana arrests, which is probably not coincidental, since the criminal justice system is a major source of treatment admissions.
Oklahoma's medical marijuana program, which is open to adults 18 or older, does not have a list of qualifying conditions, relying instead on physician discretion. As of August 2021, about 376,000 Oklahoma patients—12 percent of the adult population—had active licenses. According to survey results published last year, the conditions most commonly reported by licensees were anxiety (43 percent), depression (33 percent), sleep problems (27 percent), chronic pain (24 percent), and arthritis (13 percent).
The liberality of Oklahoma's medical marijuana program helps explain why the state has so many licensed growers (nearly 8,000) and dispensaries (more than 2,600). By comparison, Colorado, with a population about 46 percent larger, has between 700 and 800 stores selling medical and/or recreational marijuana.
"I feel like we already have recreational marijuana," Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt told The New York Times before the election. "It just doesn't seem like there are any barriers. Right now, I'm well aware there's a dispensary on every corner." The Times said Oklahoma activists hoped that "laissez-faire economic attitudes and growing support for marijuana legalization among younger Republicans could provide a pathway for recreational-use measures through the country's conservative heartland."
As economists Robin Goldstein and Daniel Sumner note in Can Legal Weed Win?, Oklahoma became an improbable model for marijuana reformers troubled by the problems that states like California have encountered in trying to displace the black market. Medical marijuana in Oklahoma is strikingly cheap and accessible, thanks largely to fast application approvals, low license fees, light regulation, and modest taxes. "When the bluest of blue-state liberal activists are looking to red states for guidance on regulatory policy," Goldstein and Sumner observe, "you know something's gone haywire."
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Far out, man.
Call me crazy, but a special election with nothing else on the ballot seems like a terrible time to pass a liberating law. I'm sure that the vast majority of people that vote in an election like that are on the old, conservative end of the spectrum.
The delayed vote (which ensured a very small voter turnout) was due to legal challenges by marijuana prohibitionists who knew the vote in November might have succeeded.
Seems like the Puritan wing of the GOP (that insists upon banning abortion and contraception, while increasing the death penalty and executions, and that previously banned alcohol, gambling, business on Sundays, interracial marriage, gay marriage and marijuana use) still wants to impose their theocracy on all Americans.
Bans on interracial marriage came from Democrats and progressives. Prohibition was bipartisan. Anti drug laws were driven by progressives.
The remaining policies aren’t theocratic, simply conservative.
After looking at photos of the man, seems like Pat McFerron needs to recognize the dangers of the Big Mac.
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It was a pretty awful bill, heavy on taxes and regulations. I voted for it because it was better than nothing, but I wasn't terribly surprised it was defeated.
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The governor scheduled this ballot on a non-election day to suppress turnout, knowing only the fundies would come out. A common refrain in their excuses for voting no? All them cartels and what. Because to combat drug cartels, we must keep drugs illegal?
So thank FOX News for this one too.
You know why Texas doesn't float out into the Gulf of Mexico don't you?
Because Oklahoma sucks!
As a Canadian I have to ask...WTF is an Oklahoma? Is it a horse drawn motorhome or something?
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The Prohibitionists are probably right on this one: cartels and drug dealers are widely known for stringently checking ID and never selling to The Children™. No underage Oklahoman would-be hophead has obtained Cannabis yet, and this ensures the status quo!
Curiously, Oklahoma doesn't publish cannabis OD death statistics, but the latest data I can find (2015) indicates Oklahoma ranks 11th in the nation for alcohol overdose deaths. Most of these deaths are underage drinkers. Isn't this because alcohol is legal and cheap? Why haven't they banned alcohol yet? Asking for some ideological consistency would be too much, I guess.
As usual, prohibitionists aren't motivated by facts, logic or compassion. It's about projection of personal hang-ups stemming from a lifetime of propaganda and the 'high' derived from wielding the bludgeon of state power. If criminalizing drugs actually worked, wouldn't we have something positive to show for a trillion dollars and 50+ years spent waging War on (some) Drugs? It stands to reason that there wouldn't be 'treatment admissions' for Cannabis, right? (LMAO! 'Treatment admissions' for Cannabis...seriously? more like 'unconstitutional Drug Court shakedowns.')
I wholly respect states' rights arguments and can even understand wanting to avoid some of the boneheaded, onerous taxation schemes like those in California that do nothing to remove black market profit margins. But I'd wager that this isn't why this bill failed. This is primarily 'liberty-loving, small government Republicans' in action, virtue-signalling just like the leftists they claim to despise, yet so closely resemble where forcible collectivism and statism are concerned!
Facts. Keeping drugs illegal is a way to force drug addicts into treatment and get them off our streets. Both are desirable to many voters.
Does it look like that's working to you? There are plenty of addicts in the streets, and forcing addicts into treatment does nothing but bloat the revenue of the treatment providers and fill treatment centers with people who don't want to get better and won't - to the detriment of anyone who does want to break his or her addiction.
"Curiously, Oklahoma doesn’t publish cannabis OD death statistics"
Because it's impossible to OD on cannabis.
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