Florida Votes Down Abortion Rights, Marijuana Legalization

Florida, West Palm Beach, USAWed Nov 06 2024
Florida voters have spoken, and they've said "no" to both abortion rights and recreational marijuana legalization. This decision comes after a significant shift to the right in the state. The abortion measure aimed to protect rights until fetal viability, which is typically around 21 weeks. However, Florida's current law restricts abortions to the first six weeks. This makes Florida one of the first states to reject abortion rights via a ballot measure since Roe v. Wade was overturned. The marijuana measure would have allowed adults to possess up to 3 ounces and would have let existing medical marijuana businesses sell to the general public. This vote happened as federal officials are considering reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous. Both measures required at least 60% voter approval to pass. Republican Governor Ron DeSantis and other leaders campaigned hard against these measures. DeSantis argued that legalizing recreational marijuana could hurt the state's tourism industry due to the smell of weed. However, some Republican leaders, including former President Donald Trump, initially supported marijuana legalization. Trump later decided to oppose the abortion rights measure. This election cycle has seen Florida move notably right compared to 2020. Miami-Dade County, for example, shifted 18 percentage points to the right, enough to flip it from blue to red. Florida is a significant prize in terms of electoral votes, and it has been trending Republican for a decade. The last Democratic presidential candidate to win Florida was Barack Obama in 2012. DeSantis was reelected by a substantial margin in 2022, reflecting the state's political shift. This is a stark contrast to the narrow margin in the 2000 presidential election between Al Gore and George W. Bush, which was ultimately decided by the U. S. Supreme Court.
https://localnews.ai/article/florida-votes-down-abortion-rights-marijuana-legalization-bb6d6d3a

questions

    Did powerful business interests sway public opinion to maintain the status quo on the abortion and marijuana laws?
    Did anyone tell the voters that legalizing weed might make their beaches 'lit' in a whole new way?
    What role did misinformation or fear-mongering play in the voter's decision to reject these measures?

actions