Statistics are shown for this demographic
Response rates from 9.8k Halton voters.
46% Yes |
54% No |
36% Yes |
41% No |
9% Yes, for most but not all drugs |
6% No, but decriminalize drugs that offer medicinal benefits such as marijuana |
2% Yes, and retroactively reduce sentences for those already serving time |
5% No, but increase funding for addiction prevention and rehabilitation |
1% No, and increase punishment for drug dealers |
|
1% No, we should pass tougher drug laws |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 9.8k Halton voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 9.8k Halton voters.
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Unique answers from Halton voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9RBN6JD7mos7MO
No, but decriminalized drugs that offer medicinal benefits such as marijuana and increase punishment for drug dealers
@9ZTRL633mos3MO
Yes, but also increase funding for drug education and require mandatory rehab for cases of severe drug addiction
@9RBWNKL7mos7MO
Yes, where it can be reasonably determined that the risk of those drugs is comparable to alcohol and cannabis.
@9RBGJNJ7mos7MO
Yes, but only if the user is in a drug rehabilitation program that has S.M.A.R.T. milestone progression.
@9QZVT448mos8MO
Some drugs, yes. Perhaps even manage them like they do in weed shops..so people know what they’re consuming. And also make the penalty for selling certain high risk/laced/“dirty” drugs extremely tough. People caught with those drugs should be given the option of jail time or rehabilitation programs.
@9DCWDPP2yrs2Y
Yes, but also actively discourage drug use and implement policies to help addicts recover
@9D64G5C2yrs2Y
Yes, drug use should be treated as a medical/social issue and not a criminal issue
@9D4GF2C2yrs2Y
We should provide funding for more help. More resources to provide SAFE drug use
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