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A Florida campaign, Smart & Safe Florida, is suing the state after the Secretary of State allegedly directed county supervisors to invalidate around 200,000 voter signatures for the 2026 marijuana legalization initiative. The state claims the petitions are invalid because they didn't include the full text of the initiative, a rule the campaign argues is unlawful and not required by statute. The campaign is asking the court to affirm the state's lack of authority to impose this new verification criterion and restore the allegedly invalidated signatures. The campaign needs 880,062 verified signatures by February 1, 2026, to make the ballot, and the potential loss of 200,000 signatures puts them at risk. This is the campaign's second attempt after a 2024 version failed to meet the 60% approval threshold. Governor Ron DeSantis has publicly expressed skepticism that the current measure will survive a Florida Supreme Court review.

Florida Marijuana Legalization Campaign Sues State Over Alleged ‘Unlawful’ Attempt To Invalidate 200,000 Signatures For 2026 Ballot Initiative

Oct 20, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



A Florida campaign that’s working to put a marijuana legalization
initiative on the 2026 ballot is suing the state for allegedly taking
“unlawful” steps to force the invalidation of about 200,000 voter
signatures it has submitted.

Smart & Safe Florida filed the lawsuit against Secretary of State Cord Byrd
and Leon County Supervisor of Elections Mark Earley in Florida’s Second
Judicial Circuit last week, contesting the secretary’s claims that
signature verification criteria render invalid any petitions that didn’t
include the full text of the initiative.

Such a rule was “not contemplated by the statute” on ballot requirements,
the campaign said. Despite that, however, the secretary earlier this month
“directed all County Supervisors of Elections to invalidate upwards of
200,000 of Plaintiff’s petitions that the Supervisors had previously
verified pursuant to the express statutory criteria.”

A campaign spokesperson told Marijuana Moment on Monday that the lawsuit is
meant to “require the Secretary of State to follow Florida law and to
prevent the State from denying the Florida voters who signed the petitions
to have their voices heard.”

“We are asking the court to enforce Florida law, it’s really that simple,”
they said. “The State is wrongly attempting to change the rules
after-the-fact and deny these registered voters their voice in the process.”

The lawsuit, first reported by Politico, notes that the secretary’s
decision to direct the invalidation of petitions comes “less than four
months before the February 1, 2026, deadline for ballot certification.”

The secretary’s office initially sent a cease-and-desist letter to Smart &
Safe Florida in March, advising the campaign about its interpretation of
the rules around including the full text of the proposed initiative on its
signature petitions, “without pointing to any statute, regulation, or
order” to support its enforceability.

“While the Secretary has the delegated authority to prescribe the style and
requirements of a citizen initiative form, he has no authority to create
and impose additional verification criteria not contemplated by the
Legislature,” the suit says. “No Florida statute…expressly or impliedly
requires that the Full Text Form be provided or displayed to a voter prior
to signing a petition.”

Regardless of legal questions surrounding the revised signature gathering
criteria, the campaign did voluntarily comply with the secretary’s
directive and began including the full text on petitions. But more than six
months after the initial contact, Division of Elections Director Maria
Matthews on October 3 emailed all of the state’s 63 county supervisors
“directing them to invalidate any Smart & Safe petition” that voters signed
before the full initiative text was added.

“While the Secretary may wish that voters have the opportunity to read the
Full Text Form before signing the petition, there is no statutory or
regulatory requirement that a voter read the full text to have their
petition verified and counted,” the lawsuit says. “The Secretary’s
Directive is inaccurate, unlawful, ultra vires, and void.”

“Because of the Secretary’s Directive, Smart & Safe is in doubt as to its
rights and responsibilities as the sponsor of the Proposed Amendment,” it
added.

The campaign is asking the court to affirm the lack of legal authority for
the secretary to “impose additional verification criteria” for petition
signatures, enjoin the state from “invalidating otherwise valid petitions”
under the secretary’s directive, restore the validation of petitions that
were allegedly unlawfully invalidated and provide any other relief deemed
necessary.

Beyond the legal challenge to the signature criteria, there’s another
curious wrinkle in how the state has so far navigated this initiative, with
the secretary of state apparently missing a statutorily imposed deadline to
submit the measure to the Florida Supreme Court for a legal review after it
met an initial threshold of 220,016 valid signatures.

According to the state Division of Elections, Smart & Safe Florida has
collected valid 662,543 signatures at last count. It needs 880,062 verified
signatures by February 1, 2026 to make the ballot. In June, the state
affirmed that the campaign collected enough for the initiative to trigger
the fiscal and judicial review.

This is the campaign’s second run at the ballot. They successfully secured
ballot placement for a 2024 version of the initiative–and a majority did
vote to pass it, but not enough to meet the state’s steep 60 percent
threshold to approve a constitutional amendment.

With approximately 200,000 petitions now potentially at risk of
invalidation, and limited time to make up the difference, the campaign may
be at jeopardy if the court upholds the state’s authority to impose new
signature criteria.

In the background of this lawsuit, a federal judge in August delivered a
win to Smart & Safe Florida—granting “complete relief” from provisions of a
law Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed to impose other serious restrictions on
signature gathering.

While the law DeSantis signed in May wasn’t directly targeted at the
cannabis initiative, there’s been concern among supporters that it could
jeopardize an already complex and costly process to collect enough
signatures to make the ballot. That’s because it would block non-residents
and non-citizens from collecting signatures for ballot measures.

In March, meanwhile, two Democratic members of Congress representing
Florida asked the federal government to investigate what they described as
“potentially unlawful diversion” of millions in state Medicaid funds via a
group with ties to DeSantis. The money was used to fight against a citizen
ballot initiative, vehemently opposed by the governor, that would have
legalized marijuana for adults.

The lawmakers’ letter followed allegations that a $10 million donation from
a state legal settlement was improperly made to the Hope Florida
Foundation, which later sent the money to two political nonprofits, which
in turn sent $8.5 million to a campaign opposing Amendment 3.

A grand jury is now reportedly taking testimony on that matter ahead of
potential prosecutions.

The governor said in February that the newest marijuana legalization
measure is in “big time trouble” with the state Supreme Court, predicting
it will be blocked from going before voters next year.

“There’s a lot of different perspectives on on marijuana,” DeSantis said.
“It should not be in our Constitution. If you feel strongly about it, you
have elections for the legislature. Go back candidates that you believe
will be able to deliver what your vision is on that.”

“But when you put these things in the Constitution—and I think, I mean, the
way they wrote, there’s all kinds of things going on in here. I think it’s
going to have big time trouble getting through the Florida Supreme Court,”
he said.

The latest initiative was filed with the secretary of state’s office just
months after the initial version failed during the November 2024
election—despite an endorsement from President Donald Trump.

Smart & Safe Florida is hoping the revised version will succeed in 2026.
The campaign—which in the last election cycle received tens of millions of
dollars from cannabis industry stakeholders, principally the multi-state
operator Trulieve—incorporated certain changes into the new version that
seem responsive to criticism opponents raised during the 2024 push.

For example, it now specifically states that the “smoking and vaping of
marijuana in any public place is prohibited.”Another section asserts that
the legislature would need to approve rules dealing with the “regulation of
the time, place, and manner of the public consumption of marijuana.”


*— Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug
policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon
supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps,
charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.*


*Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on
Patreon to get access. —*

Last year, the governor accurately predicted that the 2024 cannabis measure
from the campaign would survive a legal challenge from the state attorney
general. It’s not entirely clear why he feels this version would face a
different outcome.

While there’s uncertainty around how the state’s highest court will
navigate the measure, a poll released in February showed overwhelming
bipartisan voter support for the reform—with 67 percent of Florida voters
backing legalization, including 82 percent of Democrats, 66 percent of
independents and 55 percent of Republicans.

However, the results conflict with another recent poll from the Florida
Chamber of Commerce, a proactive opponent of legalization, that found
majority support for the reform among likely voter (53 percent) but not
enough to be enacted under the 60 percent requirement.

Another poll of Florida Republican voters showed just 40 percent of that
demographic said they’d vote in favor of the legalization proposal.

Separately, a Florida GOP senator claimed recently that the legalization
campaign “tricked” Trump into supporting the 2024 measure by misleading him
and the general public about key provisions.

Ahead of the election, Trump said last September that he felt Amendment 3
was “going to be very good” for the state.

Before making the comments, Trump met with the CEO of Trulieve, Kim Rivers,
as well as with a GOP state senator who is in favor of the reform.

Meanwhile, Florida medical marijuana officials are actively revoking the
registrations of patients and caregivers with drug-related criminal records.
The policy is part of broad budget legislation signed into law earlier this
year by DeSantis. The provisions in question direct the state Department of
Health (DOH) to cancel registrations of medical marijuana patients and
caregivers if they’re convicted of—or plead guilty or no contest
to—criminal drug charges.

*Read the Smart & Safe Florida campaign’s lawsuit against the state over
petition criteria below:*

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/26190839-florida-marijuana-legalization-campaign-lawsuit/

The post Florida Marijuana Legalization Campaign Sues State Over Alleged
‘Unlawful’ Attempt To Invalidate 200,000 Signatures For 2026 Ballot
Initiative appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

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