November 9, 2022

Recreational marijuana legalized in 2 states, rejected in 3 in 2022 election referendums

WATCH: South Dakota recreational marijuana legalization returns to ballot

Legalized recreational marijuana is coming to Maryland and Missouri, but failed to become a reality in North Dakota, South Dakota and Arkansas, according to election results from ballot measures.

The 2022 election referendums in the five states, which currently offer medicinal marijuana to their adult residents, were highly watched by proponents of legalizing marijuana for adult use. With Maryland and Missouri, 21 states and the District of Columbia now offer legalized recreational pot to their residents.

ABC News / State Legislatures
Where Marijuana is Legal in the U.S.

Toi Hutchinson, the president and CEO of the Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit that has helped campaign on this issue around the country, said the split victories indicated changing views on cannabis.

MORE: 2022 midterm election results live updates

"Voters recognize that cannabis policy reform is in the best interest of public health and safety, criminal justice reform, social equity, and personal freedom, and have made their voices heard at the ballot box. State-level legalization victories are what’s necessary to move the needle forward at the federal level,” she said in a statement.

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Ashlee Carr, center, fills out her ballot as her 4-year-old son Jaleel and her 8-year-old twin sons Jordan, right, and Jayden wait for her at The League for People with Disabilities Inc., Nov. 8, 2022, in Baltimore, Maryland.

Maryland voters passed Question 4 with 961,955 votes, 61% of the total vote, according to election results.

Beginning July 1, 2023, adults 21 and over in Maryland will be able to legally possess up to 1.5 ounces of cannabis and cultivate up to two plants. Previous marijuana convictions will be expunged and individuals who are currently serving time for such offenses would be allowed to file for resentencing.

Olivia Naugle, senior policy analyst at the Marijuana Policy Project, said in a statement the vote was a "huge victory for criminal justice reform and racial justice in Maryland."

"With Marylanders’ overwhelming support of Question 4, the state will finally end the failed era of cannabis prohibition and take a more just and equitable approach towards cannabis policy," she said.

Missouri passed its recreational ballot measure with 1,089,326 votes, roughly 53% of the total vote, according to election results. A 6% tax will be levied on recreational marijuana in Missouri as part of the constitutional amendment.

The approved constitutional amendment also releases all incarcerated individuals, paroled individuals and individuals on probation for any nonviolent marijuana-related crimes.

Criminal records and civil records for nonviolent marijuana-related offenses will also be expunged.

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A man smokes marijuana in an undated stock photo.

In South Dakota, 183,083 voters, roughly 53% of the total vote, chose not to pass a ballot initiative that would have legalized recreational marijuana, according to election results. This comes two years after 225,260 voters, roughly 54%, voted to pass a similar ballot measure.

MORE: Legalized recreational weed in South Dakota gets election redo this November

The 2020 constitutional amendment was struck down last year by the South Dakota Supreme Court which contended the ballot measure violated the state’s requirement that constitutional amendments deal with just one subject, prompting proponents to try again.

Al Drag/The New York Times via Redux Pictures
Voters cast their votes at the gym at St. John Vision Center in Little Rock, Arkansas on Nov. 8, 2022.

North Dakota voters rejected the recreational pot ballot initiative with 124,647 votes, roughly 55% of the vote. Voters previously rejected a similar measure four years ago.

In Arkansas, 500,500 voters, 56% of the total vote, voted no on a ballot measure to permit adults over 21 to use recreational cannabis.

Governor-elect Sarah Huckabee Sanders was one of the biggest opponents to the measure. The Republican candidate told reporters during a event in October that she believed legalized marijauna would do more harm than good.

"I don't think that with the drug epidemic that we have across this state, frankly across the country, that adding and giving more access to that does anything to benefit Arkansas," she said at the time.