Florida Supreme Court Declines Cannabis Campaign’s Appeal to Save 2026 Ballot Bid
- The Florida Supreme Court rejected Smart & Safe Florida's appeal to restore about 70,000 signatures for their 2026 cannabis legalization campaign.
- The signatures were disqualified under new laws that made the signature-gathering process more difficult, and an appeals court had ruled in favor of the state.
- The court's 6-1 decision ended the campaign’s last chance to qualify for the November ballot, with only Justice Jorge Labarga dissenting.
- Previous cannabis legalization efforts in Florida failed to meet the 60% supermajority threshold required, and both 2024 and 2026 campaigns faced opposition from Governor Ron DeSantis.
The Florida Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal by Smart & Safe Florida to restore signatures supporting the campaign’s 2026 cannabis legalization bid.
The signatures in question, about 70,000, were disqualified by Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd under new rules approved by lawmakers last year that made the signature-gathering process for voter ballot initiatives in the state more difficult. The campaign sued to overturn the rules, but an appeals court ruled in the state’s favor.
The appeal was the campaign’s last-ditch effort to qualify for this year’s ballot — the court already canceled oral arguments on the issue last month after the state announced the campaign had fallen short of the ballot qualification threshold. With the appeal rejected, the campaign’s last chance to qualify for November’s ballot has passed.
The justices voted 6-1 to decline the appeal, with only Justice Jorge Labarga in dissent.
Florida voters considered and nearly approved an adult-use cannabis legalization amendment in 2024, but the proposal only achieved 56% of the vote. Under state law, ballot proposals to amend the state’s constitution require a 60% supermajority to pass.
The 2024 and 2026 legalization campaigns were both opposed by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), who pushed the effort last year to hinder the voter ballot initiative process.