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Answer Overview

Response rates from 5.4k Australian Capital Territory voters.

52%
Yes
48%
No
42%
Yes
35%
No
9%
Yes, for most but not all drugs
9%
No, but decriminalise drugs that offer medicinal benefits such as marijuana
1%
Yes, and retroactively reduce sentences for those already serving time
4%
No, but increase funding for addiction prevention and rehabilitation
1%
No, and increase punishment for drug dealers
0%
No, we should pass tougher drug laws

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 5.4k Australian Capital Territory voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 5.4k Australian Capital Territory voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Australian Capital Territory voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @4ZJVPR5from Queensland  answered…4yrs4Y

Only Marijuana and tax it at 99%. Life sentences for anyone who grows their own

 @4THS3BKfrom New South Wales  answered…4yrs4Y

No, we should have the political will to remove the drugs from our streets. I'm sure the authorities know who the dealers/importers are and are most likely to be. I honestly think that it is such a lucrative black market business that the government turns a blind eye or lacks the political will to enforce the law.

 @8KYXNYHanswered…4yrs4Y

Strongly support medical license drugs such as marijuana and ketamine - though wish to keep them medicinal

 @9ZMSSFBanswered…5 days5D

The criteria for which drugs are illegal must be consistent. There is no scientifically literate argument for why marijuana is worse for you than alcohol.

 @9XV95S3answered…3wks3W

no but decriminalise marijuana and other medicinal drugs and put more money and effort into rehabilitation programs. Drug dealers should serve longer sentences though.

 @9WTP3DCanswered…4wks4W

The government should produce and distribute drugs to the public, charging distributors licensing fees and taxing drugs similarly to alcohol or tobacco. It should then punish black market providers more harshly.

 @9WNC52Zanswered…1mo1MO

Yes, but limited to marijuana and the tax and fines associated to go towards NDIS supports and drug rehabilitation programs.

 @9VYZVPJanswered…1mo1MO

Yes, increase funding for programs that provide free drug testing and safe injection equipment while increasing funded prevention and rehabilitation programs

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