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Minnesota political party advocating cannabis legalization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! is a political third party in the U.S. state of Minnesota established in 1998 to oppose drug prohibition.[1][2] They are formally recognized as a minor party.[3]
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! Party | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | LMN |
Chairperson | Dennis Schuller |
Founded | 1998 |
Preceded by | Independent Grassroots Party |
Headquarters | Minneapolis |
Newspaper | Freedom Gazette |
Ideology | Marijuana legalization |
Colors | Green, Gold, Red |
State Senate | 0 / 67 |
State House | 0 / 134 |
U.S. Senate | 0 / 2 |
U.S. House | 0 / 8 |
Website | |
www | |
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! became a major party in Minnesota in 2018 when their candidate for State Auditor, Michael Ford, received 5.3 percent of the vote.[4] During the 2010s the party began expansion attempts to other states, continuing during the 2020s, as the Legal Marijuana Now Party. They lost their major party status in a 2024 case with the Minnesota Supreme Court.
In 2020, the Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! nominee for United States Senator received 190,154 votes in the November 3 election, the largest number of votes received in 2020, in the U.S., by any such third-party candidate.[5] Democrats have stated that Legal Marijuana Now! candidates are detrimental to the Democratic Party.[6] An analysis of votes cast in the 2020 Minnesota elections found that Legal Marijuana Now! candidates might have helped Democratic candidates in swing districts, by pulling a greater number of votes from Republican candidates.[7]
Scholars have credited Legal Marijuana Now! with motivating the Minnesota Democratic Party to prioritize cannabis legalization, in 2023.[8][9]
The Minnesota Grassroots Party was formed in 1986 as a response to Ronald Reagan's War on Drugs.[10][1] In 1996 the party split, with some former members forming the Independent Grassroots Party for one election cycle.[1]
In 1998, members of the Independent Grassroots Party formed the Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! political party.[1] According to the Legal Marijuana Now Party, a person’s right to sell the products of their garden is protected by the Minnesota Constitution.[11]
Minnesota does not allow voters to petition to put the law itself onto the ballot for a vote. The only petition the people can use in Minnesota is to nominate independent and third party candidates for office.[10]
In 2014, Dan Vacek ran for Minnesota Attorney General as the Legal Marijuana Now candidate and got 57,604 votes, qualifying the party to be officially recognized and to receive public funding from the state.[12]
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! held their first convention and adopted a party constitution on November 26, 2014. Founding members Oliver Steinberg, Marty Super, and Dan Vacek comprised the organization's 2015 leadership council.
In 2016, Michael Ford was elected chairperson of the Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party. From 2018 through 2019, Marty Super served as chairperson.[13] Tim Davis was chairperson of Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now from 2020 until 2023, when Dennis Schuller became chairperson of the Minnesota party.
The Legal Marijuana Now Party placed a candidate, Zach Phelps, on the ballot in the Minnesota State Senate District 35 Special Election, in February 2016.[14][15]
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now nominated candidates by petition to appear on the ballot for the November 6, 2018, election.[16] Their candidate for State Auditor, Michael Ford, who is African-American, received 133,913 votes or 5.28%, qualifying Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party to be an official major party in the state, which gives Legal Marijuana Now candidates ballot access without the task of having to petition.[4]
The Legal Marijuana Now Party placed a candidate, John “Sparky” Birrenbach, of Pine City on the ballot in the Minnesota State Senate District 11 Special Election, in February 2019.[17]
In 2020, Legal Marijuana Now candidate Adam Weeks who was on the ballot in Minnesota's 2nd congressional district where Democratic Representative Angie Craig was seeking re-election in a close race, died four weeks before the November 3 election, throwing the election into chaos because a Minnesota state law said that if a major party candidate died during an election campaign, a special election would be held. Prior to his death, Weeks had boasted in a voicemail left for an estranged friend that a Republican had offered him money to run against the Republican and Democratic candidates.[18] Federal judges ruled that the election should go ahead because federal law setting the date of the election preempted the state law,[19][20] so the name of the candidate, Paula Overby, who was nominated by Legal Marijuana Now Party to replace Weeks, was not on the ballot.[21] State Legal Marijuana Now Party leaders encouraged their supporters to cast their votes for Weeks, in memoriam, and the dead candidate received 5.83% of votes in the three-way race.[22]
During the 2020 election campaign, Minnesota Democratic Party leaders said that the Legal Marijuana Now Party made it harder for DFL candidates to win.[20] But a St. Cloud Times analysis of votes cast in the November 3, 2020, election found that the marijuana candidates took at least as many votes, if not more, from Republican candidates than they took from Democratic candidates.[7]
Kevin O’Connor, the Legal Marijuana Now nominee for United States Senator in 2020, received 190,154 votes in the November 3 election, the largest number of votes received by any such third-party candidate nationwide.[5][23]
Legal Marijuana Now congressional candidate Mickey Moore entered the 2021 Ward 9 Minneapolis City Council race. In the nonpartisan municipal election, Moore was endorsed by the Minneapolis Area DFL Senior Caucus, Operation Safety Now, Minneapolis’ firefighters union. Other candidates in the race had endorsements including the Minneapolis Democratic Party, Twin Cities Democratic Socialists, Somali Business Association.[24]
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party nominated Richard Reisdorf of Mankato, a disabled American war veteran, to run for United States Representative from Minnesota's 1st congressional district in the August 9, 2022, special election.[25]
On August 9, 2022, Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party held a gubernatorial primary between James McCaskel and David Sandbeck, and Chris Wright and L.C. Converse. McCaskel was nominated for Governor of Minnesota by 52 percent of Legal Marijuana Now voters.[26]
In 2022, Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party nominated substitute teacher and former city clerk Eric Leitzen for Minnesota State Senator from District 26.[27]
In the District 54A race for Minnesota State Representative, Legal Marijuana Now Party nominated Ryan Martin, an automobile mechanic who was the party’s nominee for District 55A representative in 2020.[28]
Paula Overby, a supporter of Bernie Sanders who sought the DFL nomination for U.S. Senator in 2020, was nominated by Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party, in 2022, to run for U.S. Representative from the 2nd congressional district. Overby, an information technology director and author of the 2017 book The Transgender Myth: Through the Gender Looking Glass, had previously been nominated by Legal Marijuana Now Party for the 2nd congressional district in 2020 after candidate Adam Weeks' death. Overby’s platform included marijuana legalization and universal Medicare.[29][30][31]
According to Representative Craig, Minnesota's 2nd congressional district is an independent stronghold. "About one-third of the voters lean Democrat, one-third lean Republican, and the other third of voters don't really like Democrats or Republicans. They like their personal rights and freedoms and don't want politicians telling them what to do," Craig said in November.[32]
On October 5, 2022, Overby died during recovery in a hospital following surgery for a heart valve condition.[33] Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon stated that due to a 2021 federal court ruling in the wake of Adam Weeks' death, the congressional election would go ahead as scheduled on November 8, and Overby's name would remain on the ballot.[34] Without remedy for replacing their deceased nominee, under state law, Legal Marijuana Now encouraged supporters to cast their votes for Overby. The party was joined in support of voting in memoriam by Right Now USA, a conservative political action committee, while the Minnesota D—F—L Party paid for advertisements against Legal Marijuana Now, in District 2.[35] The dead candidate in 2022, Overby, won 10,728 votes in the race.[36]
In the 2022 election for United States Representative from District 7, Travis "Bull" Johnson, a Beltrami, Minnesota, goat farmer and U.S. Army veteran, was endorsed by former District 7 Representative Collin Peterson, a Democrat who held the office for 30 years, from 1991 to 2021.[37] Finishing third in the election, Legal Marijuana Now candidate Johnson got 16,421 votes, placing fourth highest out of 126 contests nationally, in 2022, with third party or independent candidates in three-way races.[38]
During testimony supporting Minnesota Senate File 73 to create a regulated commercial cannabis market, at the bill's first Minnesota Senate committee hearing, in 2023, Oliver Steinberg, a Legal Marijuana Now Party founder, said that marijuana prohibition has not stopped people from using cannabis, but prohibition has "succeeded perhaps in terrorizing or intimidating citizens, in canceling civil liberties, blighting both urban and rural communities, all without eradicating the outlawed substance."[39] Some political scholars have remarked that Minnesota's single-issue marijuana parties and strong third parties such as Independence, which evolved from Governor Jesse Ventura's Reform Party, motivated the state Democratic—Farmer—Labor Party to pass a marijuana legalization law, in 2023.[8][9]
On Saturday, April 29, 2023, after the Minnesota Senate voted to pass Senate File 73, Legal Marijuana Now Party held a rally on the state capitol steps, in celebration, featuring speakers and music by Paul Metsa and Kung Fu Hippies. Party spokesperson Dennis Schuller, who was nominated for Minnesota House of Representatives in 2020, told a Star Tribune reporter that federal prohibition laws against cannabis, overseeing implementation of the state's regulated market, and expungement of past criminal records, illustrate tasks that remain for Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party, planning their campaign in 2024 for United States Senate.[9]
Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now! Party held a presidential nomination primary on March 5, 2024, for the 2024 presidential election. The contest was held on Super Tuesday alongside primaries in 14 other states and territories. The race was the first Legal Marijuana Now! presidential primary, and the first third party presidential primary run by the state of Minnesota since 1916.[40]
On May 10, 2024, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that Legal Marijuana Now! no longer met the criteria for major party status in Minnesota. Among other things, this removed their automatic ballot access and some legal protections.[41]
Year | Office | Candidate | Popular votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | United States Representative, District 4 | Dan Vacek | 5,839[42] | 2.40% |
Year | Office | Candidate | Popular votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Minnesota Attorney General | Dan Vacek | 57,604[43] | 2.99% |
2016 | Minnesota State Senator, District 35 | Zachary Phelps[15] | 180[44] | 4.10% |
2016 | United States Representative, District 4 | Susan Pendergast Sindt | 27,152[45] | 7.71% |
2016 | United States Representative, District 5 | Dennis Schuller | 30,759[45] | 8.50% |
2016 | Minnesota State Senator, District 60 | Martin Super | 8,861[45] | 21.78% |
2018 | United States Senator | Dennis Schuller | 66,236[46] | 2.55% |
2018 | United States Senator | Sarah Wellington | 95,614[46] | 3.70% |
2018 | United States Representative, District 4 | Susan Pendergast Sindt | 13,776[47] | 4.19% |
2018 | Minnesota State Auditor | Michael Ford | 133,913[48] | 5.28% |
Year | Candidate | Lieutenant Governor candidate | Votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | James McCaskel | David Sandbeck | 29,346 | 1.17% |
Year | Office | Candidate | Popular votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | United States Senator | Kevin O’Connor | 190,154[23] | 5.92% |
2020 | United States Representative, District 2 | Adam Charles Weeks | 24,751[22] | 5.83% |
2020 | United States Representative, District 5 | Michael Moore | 29,537[63] | 9.54% |
2020 | United States Representative, District 7 | Slater Johnson | 37,979[64] | 4.87% |
2022 | United States Representative, District 1 | Richard Reisdorf | 1,545 | 1.30% |
2022 | United States Representative, District 1 | Richard Reisdorf | 6,389 | 2.15% |
2022 | United States Representative, District 2 | Paula Overby | 10,728 | 3.30% |
2022 | United States Representative, District 7 | Travis "Bull" Johnson | 16,421 | 5.37% |
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