Support for marijuana legalization increased again, according to a survey from the Pew Research Center.

In the poll of about 1,750 people administered in late September 2018, 62 percent of Americans said they agreed that cannabis should be legal. That’s a 1 percentage point point bump since the last time the center polled on marijuana in October 2017.

And, opposition to marijuana legalization continued to decline at an even greater rate than support increased. Only 34 percent said that marijuana should remain illegal, compared with 37 percent who said the same in the 2017 poll.

“One of the greatest benchmarks of the success of legalization is the simple fact that public support for this policy change has only grown in the years since states began enacting it,” Deputy Director Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), wrote Marijuana Moment in an email. “The public has spoken and it is time for leaders in both parties to come together and amend federal law in a manner that comports with marijuana’s rapidly changing cultural and legal status.”

Mason Tvert, a spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, agreed.

“The fact that support continues to grow as states have been ending marijuana prohibition over the past few years suggests Americans are comfortable with the changes that are taking place,” Tvert said. “They see cannabis being sold legally in regulated businesses and they recognize it is a much more preferable system. The idea of arresting and punishing adults for consuming marijuana is becoming increasingly unpopular, and elected officials are taking notice.”

Broken down by demographics, a majority of respondents in virtually every category voiced support for legalization. The exceptions were Republicans, Hispanic individuals and white evangelical Protestants.

Data from Pew Research Center, Washington, D.C. (Oct. 8, 2018)

That said, 59 percent of independent respondents who said they “lean Republican” favor legal cannabis, and a separate nationally representative survey from Gallup last year showed that a slim majority of Republicans, 51 percent, backed legal marijuana.

“Republicans are divided, with 45 percent in favor of legalizing marijuana and 51 percent opposed,” Pew wrote of the new results. “Still, the share of Republicans saying marijuana should be legal has increased from 39 percent in 2015.”

Diving into the results as broken down by generation signals that legalization is a trend that will only accelerate in the future. Seventy-four percent of millennials back ending prohibition, as do 63 percent of those in Generation X. Only the Silent Generation opposes legalization overall, but Pew reports that its members “have become more supportive in the past year.”

Data from the Pew Research Center, Washington, D.C. (Oct. 8, 2018)

Growing support for legalization has closely followed legislative developments at the state and local level, the survey authors observed. “[In November 2018], voters across seven states Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, North Dakota, Ohio, Utah, and Wisconsin — will vote on a variety of statewide and local marijuana reform measures,” Hannah Hartig and Abigail Geiger of Pew Research Center wrote.

What direction voters in those jurisdictions will take in November 2018 has yet to be seen, but this and other polls seems to reveal a political landscape where reform efforts have the advantage over sustained prohibition.


This article has been republished from Marijuana Moment under a content syndication agreement. Read the original article here.

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