Zach Wendling
LINCOLN — A majority of Nebraskans voted Tuesday to embrace legalizing and regulating medical cannabis, though the final say will likely be up to the courts, not the ballot box.
Both Initiative Measures 437 and 438, to legalize and regulate medical cannabis, had a wide margin of support statewide. The measures came from the Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana campaign. This was the campaign’s third attempt to reach the ballot.
Whether medical cannabis becomes legal in the state post-election, however, depends on the outcome of legal challenges currently playing out in Lancaster County District Court.
District Judge Susan Strong is weighing legal arguments following a four-day trial about the validity of tens of thousands of already validated signatures on each measure’s petition for ballot access. Her decision isn’t expected for at least two weeks.
Strong rejected an attempt to prevent counting or making public Tuesday’s election results.
AP called the race in favor of Initiative 437 on Tuesday night just before midnight. As of that time, the legalization ballot measure led with 71.2% of the vote. Initiative 438, the regulatory ballot measure, followed closely, at 67.5%.
Initiative Measure 437, the Nebraska Medical Cannabis Patient Protection Act, would set an allowable amount of medical cannabis at 5 ounces; exempt patients and caregivers from penalty for using or assisting someone else in using the cannabis; and require a written recommendation from a health care practitioner before prescription.
Initiative Measure 438, the Nebraska Medical Cannabis Regulation Act, would define cannabis; legalize possessing, manufacturing, distributing, delivering and dispensing cannabis for medical purposes; and create the Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission to oversee the new law.
Crista Eggers, the campaign manager for the ballot measures, told the Nebraska Examiner on Tuesday that after more than a decade of fighting, and three ballot attempts, “it solidifies for us that we have always been fighting for the right reason.”
“We have been fighting for the patients in this state, and tonight’s win is not because of a few people or one campaign,” she said. “Tonight’s win is for the Nebraska patients.”
Legal challenges
The legal challenges were brought by John Kuehn, a former state senator and former State Board of Health member who opposes medical marijuana, and Secretary of State Bob Evnen, who launched his own challenges as part of Kuehn’s lawsuit, even though his office had already certified the ballot measures for the ballot
Attorney General Mike Hilgers’ office is defending Evnen in the case. Hilgers has opposed legalizing medical cannabis and delta-8, which contains THC, the compound in the cannabis plant most commonly associated with getting a person high. Hilgers served with Kuehn in the Legislature, as did one of Kuehn’s attorneys, former State Sen. Andrew La Grone.
The lawsuit could end in one of a few ways. Strong could:
- Side with Kuehn and Evnen outright, voiding the election results.
- Side with Kuehn and Evnen but allow the ballot sponsors to try to cure the “invalidity” of enough signatures in a second phase of the trial, after the election.
- Side with the ballot sponsors outright, ending the lower court trial, which would leave the election results intact.
Strong and attorneys involved in the case have acknowledged that no matter who prevails, the decision is likely to be appealed to the Nebraska Supreme Court.
Eggers, whose 10-year-old son, Colton, has epilepsy and severe seizures, said there is still work ahead. The campaign remains confident it will prevail in its court fight, Eggers said, and hopes that someday soon, patients and loved ones will find hope and strength from a new treatment option.
“The day that that happens, that’s when we know that we did our jobs,” Eggers said. “It’s not over, a lot ahead of us, but I think tonight speaks that Nebraskans have had their voices heard once and for all on this issue.”
Third try for ballot measure
Multiple legislative efforts, including some led by one of the ballot sponsors, State Sen. Anna Wishart of Lincoln, had previously stalled, moving the fight to the ballot box.
The campaign started in 2019 for the 2020 ballot with a constitutional amendment that the Nebraska Supreme Court ultimately ruled was too broad, in violation of the Nebraska Constitution.
For the 2022 ballot, sponsors returned with separate petitions to legalize and regulate the drug, but they fell short of gathering enough signatures, in part after a major donor’s death.
The 2024 attempt is the furthest Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana has gotten.
The U.S. Department of Justice has formally moved to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug, which could aid future federal approval.
Thirty-eight states have legalized medical marijuana, while 24 of them, plus Washington, D.C., have also legalized recreational use. The other states, including Nebraska, allow limited access to cannabis products with little to no THC, according to the Pew Research Center.
Nebraska’s constitutional officers will meet Dec. 2 to certify Tuesday’s election results. Legal challenges can continue after that date.