Arkansas court: Ruling stands on medical marijuana Issue 7, votes won’t be counted
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. The Arkansas Supreme Court said Thursday that it wont reconsider its decision last week to disqualify a medical marijuana proposal from the ballot after thousands of people had already voted.
In a 5-2 decision, the justices denied a petition to rehear the ruling, which blocked state officials from counting any votes cast for the proposal, known as Issue 7. The court last week ruled the campaign behind the measure did not follow state law regarding paid canvassers.
The court, which rarely grants requests to rehear cases, did not elaborate on its decision Thursday. The courts ruling leaves a competing medical marijuana proposal as the only valid one on the ballot. That measure, Issue 6, has not been disqualified.
Arkansas voters narrowly rejected legalizing medical marijuana four years ago. The head of the campaign behind Issue 7 said the group would push for changing canvasser restrictions, which she says are unfair to smaller, grassroots campaigns.
This is bigger than Issue 7, said Melissa Fults, campaign director for Arkansans for Compassionate Care. They could have done this to anybody.
Turning a red state green: Is marijuana mind-set changing in the Bible Belt?
But this is just drug abuse and its not medicine: Arkansas MMJ proponents launch TV ad
Weed news and interviews: Get podcasts of The Cannabist Show.
Subscribe to our newsletter here.
Watch The Cannabist Show.
Peruse our Cannabist-themed merchandise (Ts, hats, hoodies) at Cannabist Shop.
The timing of the courts decision last week drew criticism from both supporters and opponents of the medical marijuana proposal. The court struck the measure three days after the start of early voting, and nearly 400,000 people in the state have already voted.
A separate lawsuit filed in federal court Wednesday asks that election officials allow some voters who cast a ballot for Issue 7 but not Issue 6 before last weeks ruling be allowed to ...