Pubdate: Sat, 23 Oct 2010
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Page: Front Page, top of page, continued on page A16
Copyright: 2010 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Authors: John Hoeffel and Phil Willon
Cited: Proposition 19 http://yeson19.com/
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19)

TIMES/USC POLL

SURVEY SHOWS LEGAL POT BID FAILING

In Other Results, Cooley and Newsom Hold Slim Leads for Attorney 
General and Lieutenant Governor.

California's marijuana legalization ballot initiative, Proposition 
19, is trailing badly, according to a new Los Angeles Times/USC poll, 
which found likely voters opposing it 51% to 39%.

In the race for attorney general, Republican Steve Cooley holds a 
narrow lead over his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris.

Cooley, the Los Angeles County district attorney, is aided greatly by 
voter support on his usually Democratic home turf. In the survey, 
Cooley held a 42%-33% advantage among likely voters in Los Angeles 
County. Statewide, he had a 40%-35% edge among likely voters over 
Harris, who is the San Francisco district attorney.

Another Bay Area Democrat, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, has a 
slight lead in the race for lieutenant governor. Newsom was ahead of 
Republican Abel Maldonado, a former state senator from Santa Maria 
who was appointed lieutenant governor in April, 42% to 37%.

The marijuana legalization measure has led in most polls, but support 
has softened recently. The initiative's supporters, who are short on 
money, have not run the television advertisements that most political 
strategists say are essential to communicate with voters in a state 
the size of California.

"If voters don't see a compelling reason to vote for an initiative, 
the default is to vote against it," said Darry Sragow, the interim 
director of the Times/USC poll. "That may be happening here in the 
absence of a visible, compelling campaign." The poll indicates that 
"voters who are going to make the critical difference seem to be 
saying, 'I'm not ready to do this,'" he said.

Proposition 19, which needs a majority vote to pass, would allow 
Californians who are at least 21 to grow up to 25 square feet of 
marijuana and possess up to an ounce. Cities and counties could 
authorize commercial cultivation and sales, and could impose taxes.

The poll, conducted for The Times and the USC College of Letters, 
Arts and Sciences, found the initiative favored by Democrats, 51% to 
41%, and opposed by Republicans, 66% to 23%.

Men were evenly split, and women were leaning against it. Both sides 
consider mothers a key swing vote, with backers of legalization 
saying it would lead to regulations that would do more to keep pot 
from children, and opponents saying young people would have easier 
access and so more would use it.

Likely voters younger than 40 are in favor of Proposition 19 by 48% 
to 37%, but older voters are opposed, the poll found. Among likely 
voters 65 and over, only 28% support the measure, while 59% said they 
were opposed.

Poll respondent Nancy Bynes, 51, who is married with two adult 
children, said she smoked pot as a teen in the 1970s. A dog groomer 
who lives near Nevada City, she said she doesn't believe marijuana is 
dangerous and wants police to focus on serious crimes. "Go after the 
meth labs, please. Pot is not worth it," said Bynes, who switches her 
registration between parties.

But Shawn Lidtka, a single Democrat from Garden Grove and a 
mechanical engineering student at Cal State Fullerton, said he 
opposes legalizing marijuana because he believes the drug saps people 
of their ambition. "My goal is to be deeper into life, not diminish 
it," said the 28-year-old Army veteran.

Some polls have shown Latino voters, initially against legalization, 
swinging toward it, but the Times/USC poll found they are against it 
by 2 to 1. White voters also oppose the measure. Supporters of 
legalization have highlighted statistics showing members of minority 
groups are arrested for marijuana possession at higher rates than whites.

In the two "down-ballot" races in the survey - attorney general and 
lieutenant governor - the biggest remaining wild card is a large pool 
of undecided voters. Seventeen percent of the likely voters still 
have not made up their minds for attorney general and 11% for 
lieutenant governor - a common occurrence in these races, which 
receive considerably less voter attention than the contests for 
governor or U.S. Senate. In the governor's race, by contrast, only 4% 
of likely voters were undecided, the poll found.

Harris' campaign has focused heavily on her pro-environment agenda 
and a call for stepped-up efforts against financial crimes such as 
mortgage fraud and identity theft. She has strong support among 
Latinos and union members, as well as young voters between the ages 
of 18 and 44, the survey showed.

The two split almost evenly among California's decline-to-state 
voters and those who describe themselves as moderates. However, 22% 
of the Democrats who are likely to vote said they supported Cooley, a 
finding that probably reflects his popularity in the Los Angeles 
area. A veteran prosecutor largely seen as a moderate Republican, 
Cooley has won three D.A. elections in Los Angeles County.

Los Angeles County is home to one out of four registered voters in 
California, and is a near must-win for any Democrat running statewide.

Women voters, who as a whole tend to vote Democratic, were evenly 
divided between the two, while men favored Cooley by a 10% margin.

"The advantage you have when you are the district attorney of the 
county of Los Angeles is that you get a lot press coverage every day 
just by doing your job. It's seen by anyone who watches L.A. 
television ... that media market accounts for 40% of the population 
of the state," Sragow said.

Harris holds nearly a two-to-one advantage over Cooley on her home 
territory in the Bay Area. Cooley enjoys an edge in most of the rest 
of the state, including the Central Valley, the Central Coast and the 
inland territory from Sacramento north.

In contrast with Harris, Newsom in the lieutenant governor's race 
crushes Maldonado in Los Angeles County by more than a two-to-one 
margin. As is often the case, however, the Republican is stronger 
throughout the rest of Southern California.

Maldonado also has made inroads among fellow Latinos, chipping away a 
pool of voters that have traditionally backed Democrats. Newsom still 
has a 10% advantage among likely Latino voters. But nearly a third of 
the those Latinos polled backed Maldonado - close to the level of 
support that political strategists say a Republican candidate needs 
to win statewide.

The poll surveyed 1,501 registered voters by telephone, including 
cellphones and landlines, between Oct. 13 and Oct. 20. The sample 
included 922 likely voters. The margin of error for the full sample 
is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points; for the likely voter sample 
it is 3.2 points. The sample for Proposition 19 included 441 likely 
voters; the margin of error is plus or minus 4.6 percentage points. 
The Democratic polling firm Greenberg Quinlan Rosner and the 
Republican firm American Viewpoint conducted the survey. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake