Poll: Most Americans & Canadians Ready To Legalize Marijuana

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Two Thirds of Respondents Expect Marijuana To Be Legal In Next 10 Years
A majority of people in the United States and Canada believe cannabis should be readily available for those who want to use it, a new two-country Angus Reid Public Opinion poll has found.
In the online survey of representative national samples, a majority of Canadians (57 percent) and Americans (54 percent) support the legalization of marijuana.
Most respondents in each Canadian region back the legalization of cannabis, including 64 percent of Atlantic Canadians and 60 percent of British Columbians.

In the United States, respondents in the Northeast (61 percent) have the highest level of support for legalizing marijuana, while those in the South hold the lowest, but still a majority (51 percent).

Angus Reid Public Opinion

In Canada, men (64 percent) are much more likely than women (50 percent) to call for the legalization of cannabis, while there is no wide gender gap in the United States (55 percent of males and 53 percent of females).
The bulk of support for legal marijuana comes from respondents aged 18 to 34 in the United States (65 percent) and those aged 35 to 54 in Canada (61 percent).
The level of support for legalizing other drugs–such as crack cocaine, powder cocaine, ecstasy, heroin and crystal meth–stands at 11 per cent or lower in each country. Still, two thirds of Canadians (68 percent) and Americans (66 percent) describe the “war on drugs” as a failure.
Half of respondents (50 percent in Canada, 49 percent in the United States) believe cannabis should be legal in their countries, regardless of what other nations do about it. In addition, two thirds of Americans and Canadians (66 percent) expect marijuana to be legal in their respective country in the next 10 years.
While two thirds of Americans (65 percent) say the United States has a serious drug abuse problem, fewer Canadians (43 percent) feel the same way about their country.
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