Politics
Florida Officials Advance Marijuana Legalization Initiative To Ballot Review After Being Sued Over Delay
“Respondents have now sent the demanded…letter to Smart & Safe and submitted the initiative petition to the Attorney General.”
By Liv Caputo, Florida Phoenix
Weeks after a pro-marijuana group sued the DeSantis administration in the Florida Supreme Court for allegedly slow-walking the process to put an amendment on the ballot, Florida election officials announced that they have taken that step.
Attorney General James Uthmeier (R) asked the court in a brief Tuesday to dismiss the case because, a day earlier, Division of Elections Director Maria Matthews completed the step that Smart & Safe Florida sued the state over in late October.
This involved issuing a letter acknowledging that the organization had enough support to advance its proposal to legalize recreational marijuana.
“The sole relief sought by Smart & Safe’s petition is an order ‘compelling Respondents to issue the…letter, thus advancing the [Initiative] Petition,’” the state’s response petition reads. “Respondents have now sent the demanded…letter to Smart & Safe and submitted the initiative petition to the Attorney General.”
This is the second lawsuit Smart & Safe had filed against the DeSantis administration over its proposal, and came months after the pro-marijuana group nearly legalized recreational use of the drug during the 2024 election cycle. Although the initiative garnered 56 percent support from Floridians, it fell short of the 60 percent threshold needed to become part of the state Constitution.
That failure came on the heels of a massive and expensive statewide campaign by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), First Lady Casey DeSantis and other top officials who were vehemently opposed to legalizing weed, alleging in a slew of press conferences that everything from the smell to corporate greed would damage the state.
Uthmeier, the governor’s former chief of staff, came under fire after his political committee to defeat the amendment received millions that originated from a Medicaid settlement doled out to Casey DeSantis’s charity, Hope Florida.
A grand jury is now reportedly investigating the DeSantis administration’s role in defeating the 2024 measure and Hope Florida’s financials.
What happened?
In Smart & Safe’s October 31 lawsuit against the state, the organization claimed it had notified Matthews and Secretary of State Cord Byrd in August that the proposal had secured more than three times the number of verified petitions (more than 660,000) needed to make it to the ballot.
Smart & Safe had asked the officials to take the next step in the ballot initiative process, which would be to send Smart & Safe a letter acknowledging that its petition had enough signatures, so that the state could submit the proposal to the attorney general, who then would forward the initiative for Supreme Court review. The organization needs 880,000 signatures total to win a ballot space.
But that didn’t happen.
Smart & Safe, in its petition demanding the Florida Supreme Court force the state to send the letter, alleged that Florida was purposely roadblocking the marijuana amendment by attempting to stall out Smart & Safe’s proposal, the Phoenix previously reported.
That referred to Byrd’s October 3 order to county supervisors that they trash as many as 200,000 signatures—nearly one-quarter of what’s needed to qualify for next year’s ballot—because organizers failed to provide the entire amendment to people it reached out to by mail.
This was the basis of Smart & Safe’s October 19 suit against the administration in circuit court.


