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Three In Four New Hampshire Residents Support Legalizing Marijuana, With Bipartisan Majorities Backing State-Run Model

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Nearly three in four New Hampshire voters support legalizing marijuana, according to a new poll. And bipartisan majorities also say they’re in favor of conducting cannabis sales through a state-run model as would be the case under a bill that recently passed the House of Representatives.

The Granite State Poll, published by the University of New Hampshire (UNH) on Friday, found that 74 percent of residents in the state feel that prohibition should end. In a separate question, sixty-eight percent said they support a bill that passed the House this month to have the state Liquor Commission exclusively conduct sales—a proposal that has raised some concerns among advocates and stakeholders.

Seventy-nine percent of Democrats, 68 percent of independents and 56 percent of Republicans said they back the unique reform approach.

Via UNH.

Meanwhile, support for legalization overall has grown demonstrably in the state over the past decade, increasing by 25 percentage points since UNH started polling residents on the issue in 2013.

Via UNH.

Just 15 percent of Granite Staters now oppose legalizing cannabis.

But while bipartisan majorities said they favor the state-run legalization proposal, it should be noted that respondents were not given an alternative regulatory model in the new poll. And when asked about legalization through a traditional, private retail model last year, 78 percent said they favor that approach.

What both surveys show, however, is that New Hampshire residents are ready to let adults legally purchase cannabis in one way or another. The latest poll found majority support for basic reform across all demographics, including age, gender and education level.

“This poll confirms, once again, that cannabis legalization is very popular with New Hampshire residents,” Matt Simon, director of public and government relations for Prime Alternative Treatment Centers of NH, told Marijuana Moment. “It also tells us something new: the liquor monopoly model is substantially (10 percent) less popular than the idea of allowing sales by licensed retail outlets. It will be interesting to see how policymakers choose to interpret these numbers.”

The new poll involved interviews with 1,081 New Hampshire residents from February 18-22. The margin of error was +/-3.0 percentage points.

The state-centered legislation from Rep. Daryl Abbas (R) cleared the chamber in a 235-119 vote this month, despite facing resistance from people on both sides of the broader cannabis debate. The action comes about a month after the House passed a separate, non-commercial legalization bill that’s also generated criticism.

Under the proposal, which must still go before the House Finance Committee because of its fiscal components and then receive another floor vote before advancing to the Senate, adults 21 and older would be able to purchase cannabis from state-run dispensaries operated by the New Hampshire Liquor Commission. The could possess up to four ounces, but home cultivation would continue to be criminalized—one of the chief complaints from activists.

State regulators would have until October 1 to adopt rules for “the registration and regulation of cannabis establishments and cannabis cultivation facilities.” They would then have another two months to create regulations on issues like advertising, labeling, civil fines, security and THC limits.

Some advocates had hoped that the legislation would be defeated so that lawmakers could consider alternative reform proposals to create a legal marijuana market that more closely aligns with those established in other states.


Marijuana Moment is already tracking more than 1,000 cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.

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In general, many advocates have usually welcomed whatever reforms they can achieve in the fight to end prohibition. But in New Hampshire, they’ve grown particularly impatient with the GOP-controlled legislature, especially as it advances contentious legalization options while snubbing their preferred vehicles.

The non-commercial legalization bill that passed the House last month is another example of legislation that’s fallen short of expectations. It would allow adults 21 and older to possess and give away up to three-fourths of an ounce of marijuana and grow up to six plants, but it wouldn’t permit cannabis commerce.

The bill is virtually identical to an earlier version that also passed the House under Democratic control in 2020. The previous bill died in Senate committee.

What made last month’s House vote to pass the home grow bill from Rep. Carol McGuire (R) all the more frustrating for activists was the fact that it advanced one day after the chamber narrowly rejected a separate, broader legalization proposal that would have regulated commercial production and sales.

Meanwhile, three lawmakers—Reps. Joshua Adjutant (D), Renny Cushing (D) and Andrew Prout (R)—each filed separate bills to put marijuana legalization on the state’s 2022 ballot.

It would take a supermajority 60 percent vote in both chambers to advance any of the proposed constitutional amendments. But while that may be a tall task in the GOP-controlled legislature, if they’re successful, it would enable lawmakers to avoid a likely veto on statutory reform legislation from anti-legalization Gov. Chris Sununu (R).

Should legislators approve placing a constitutional amendment to legalize cannabis on the ballot, 67 percent of voters would then have to vote in favor for it to be enacted. Recent polling indicates that residents are ready for the reform, with three in four New Hampshirites favoring legalization.

While the governor remains opposed to adult-use legalization, advocates are encouraged that he signed a bill in August adding opioid use disorder as a qualifying condition for the state’s medical cannabis program and also allows out-of-state patients to access dispensaries.

In 2017, Sununu signed a bill decriminalizing marijuana possession in the Granite State, though he continues to oppose adding a legal commercial cannabis sales component.

In 2019, lawmakers sent a medical cannabis homegrow bill to Sununu’s desk, but he vetoed it.

Meanwhile, other nearby northeast states such as Maine and Vermont have already legalized recreational cannabis.

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