The Green Party has renewed its call for evidence-based cannabis regulation, on the fifth anniversary of a referendum in which the public voted only narrowly against legalisation.
โFive years ago, 1.4 million New Zealanders voted on each side of the Cannabis Legalisation and Control Referendum. Today, the Greens continue to work for sensible, evidence-based regulation to reduce harm,โ says Green Party Co-Leader Chlรถe Swarbrick.
โThose who campaigned against legal regulation of cannabis could not defend the harm of criminal prohibition – the best they could muster was critique of legalisation. So today weโre launching an online platform for New Zealanders to tell us what they think sensible regulation could look like.
โThe referendum result made it clear that the status quo was untenable, and that an ongoing, mature conversation about drug law reform was necessary.
โIn the last five years, the resources and time of our Courts and Police have continued to be wasted enforcing cannabis prohibition. In the past year alone, 26 people have been imprisoned for cannabis offences as their most serious charge, and three imprisoned just for cannabis use.
โAfter 50 years of the war on drugs, itโs clear the drugs are winning. The only way to address these issues is through sensible regulation, which means minimising the profit motive and cutting out the black market.
โThis isnโt a question of whether you use cannabis or even like cannabis. This is about acknowledging the reality that cannabis exists and that our laws can either increase or decrease harm. Right now, we have the worst of all worlds.
โWe believe New Zealanders deserve better, and we look forward to hearing their ideas on what sensible regulation should look like,โ says Chlรถe Swarbrick.


