In short, we are talking about ruby-red territory here. And these voters in HD-97 also supported the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Act (Arkansas Ballot Measure 5) by roughly 52% to 48%.
It’s important to remember that State House boundaries (and most other political subdivisions) do not always coincide with county precinct lines. Due to the nature of these variations, we are constrained to using a “back of the envelope” calculation by comparing the results of HD-97 to those same precinct’s results of ABM-5.
It’s not perfect, but it gives us enough information to declare unequivocally that these voters were supportive of the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Act in 2012. Elections are complex, and nobody can run as merely being the “pro-medical marijuana” candidate and expect to win. But by the same token, candidates should not be allowed to ignore this issue. No major elected official endorsed ABM-5 in 2012, and most pretended it did not exist. The voters, I suspect, would flock to a candidate (from any party) who would embrace their district’s will.
(click to enlarge)