Despite the opposition from former prisoners like McCauley, Legal Mo 22 advocates believe the initiative is the best course for Missouri. The proposal “has the broad, robust support of a multitude of criminal justice reform organizations,” said Alan Zagier, a spokesperson for Legal Mo 22, referencing endorsements from the NAACP, the ACLU of Missouri, and other organizations. Tony Rothert, Director of Integrated Advocacy for the ACLU of Missouri, noted in a comment to OZY that his organization’s endorsement of Legal Mo 22 does not signal opposition to the Cannabis Freedom Act. “We reject the false premise that this is an adversarial situation,” Rothert said. “We are not opposed to the bill [the Cannabis Freedom Act]. Both the initiative and legislative processes of making laws present substantial barriers. We support legalization and expungement.” Dan Viets, a Missouri cannabis rights attorney, says that Legal Mo 22 “will stop most of the 20,000 arrests and prosecutions that happen each year in Missouri for marijuana. [The pushback against Legal Mo 22 exists] because some disappointed business license applicants care more about making money than stopping arrests and legalizing marijuana.” Trade association MoCannTrade has announced that Missouri’s medicinal marijuana sales topped $30 million in March. With so much at stake, Legal Mo 22 seems to be taking no chances. The Missouri Independent reported that, since the beginning of April, the initiative has received more than $1.4 million from out-of-state industry sources, including Proper Cannabis, Good Day Farm, Flora Farms, BeLeaf, and Greenlight. As this debate has played out, Governor Mike Parson has remained silent. Advocates for Legal Mo 22 have already collected the required 170,000 signatures to put their initiative on the ballot. But the activists fighting for the Cannabis Freedom Act believe they are winning, and that the Missouri Legislature will approve the legislation when the bill goes to the full house before the legislature closes its current session at the end of May. |