California Proposition 19 (1972)
Proposition 19, also known as the California Marijuana Initiative , was a ballot initiative on the November 7, 1972 California statewide ballot. This was the first attempt to legalize marijuana by ballot measure in the history of the United States. If it had passed, the measure would have removed penalties in the State of California for persons 18 years of age or older for using, possessing, growing, processing, or transporting marijuana for personal use. The California Marijuana Initiative's organizers coordinated a huge grassroots organizing drive to place the measure on the ballot. The initiative qualified for the November statewide ballot in June 1972. The initiative was defeated by the voters with 66.5% No votes to 33.5% Yes votes.
Supporters of Proposition 19 argued that legalization was supported by scientific research and the government's own experts and that enforcing criminal penalties was costing a fortune in taxpayer dollars and ruining the lives of ordinary people. Opponents contended that marijuana was dangerous and unpredictable and that legalization would encourage drug abuse and damage society.
Effects of the Bill
Proposition 19 would have legalized the personal use, possession, and manufacture of marijuana by adults in the state of California. It would not have affected existing laws against sales, other commercial activities, and dangerous behavior. The official ballot summary stated that the measure "Removes state penalties for personal use. Proposes a statute which would provide that no person eighteen years or older shall be punished criminally or denied any right or privilege because of his planting, cultivating, harvesting, drying, processing, otherwise preparing, transporting, possessing or using marijuana. Does not repeal existing, or limit future, legislation prohibiting persons under the influence of marijuana from engaging in conduct that endangers others." Indeed, if Proposition 19 had succeeded in legalizing personal marijuana activities in California, those activities would still have remained criminal violations of Federal law under the Controlled Substances Act.Fiscal Impact
The cost analysis by California's Legislative Analyst showed no increase in state or local costs. The analysis suggested a potential decrease in state and local criminal justice costs related to marijuana.Main Arguments
Arguments in favor of Proposition 19 were made by Joel Fort, M.D., Mary Jane Fernandez, and Gordon S. Brownell, J.D.. Arguments opposing Proposition 19 were made by H. L. Richardson and Dr. Harden Jones, Ph.D..Arguments In Favor
- Proposition legalizes personal use activities. It does not legalize sale of marijuana or encourage its use.
- Marijuana has been thoroughly researched and its effects are well understood. Decriminalization is recommended by President Nixon's Shafer Commission and other conservative authorities.
- Marijuana is relatively safe compared to alcohol and tobacco, the two most popular legal drugs.
- Measure will save hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars through reductions in criminal justice expenditures.
- Current system destroys the lives of hundreds of thousands of normal people for engaging in personal behavior.
- Laws are deterrents. Legalization will encourage use and abuse.
- Marijuana is poorly researched and understood and has dangerous, unpredictable side effects.
- Marijuana is a gateway drug and potentially addicting.
- Countries that experimented with marijuana legalization experienced negative social consequences and again imposed criminal penalties.
- Marijuana legalization will result in social disintegration.
History
Polling History
Date of opinion poll | Conducted by | Sample size | Yes | No | Undecided | Margin of error |
July 31–August 6, 1972 | Field Poll | 471 | 33% | 62% | 5% | ±6.7% |
September 29-October 7, 1972 | Field Poll | 1275 | 32% | 61% | 7% | ±3% |
October 30-November 1, 1972 | Field Poll | 1467 | 32% | 51% | 17% | ±3% |