Marijuana plants.
Marijuana plants. Credit: AP file Photo

Massachusetts voters in 2026 could have the chance to repeal adult-use recreational marijuana.

The state Elections Division announced Dec. 18 that it certified 78,301 signatures backing a petition called โ€œAn Act to Restore a Sensible Marijuana Policy.โ€ The measure aims to roll back recreational cannabis use, but would preserve medical use.

In 2016, 53.7% of voters cast their ballots in favor of legalizing recreational marijuana, while 46.3% of voters opposed it, according to data from Secretary of State Bill Galvinโ€™s office.

An April 2024 poll from the MassInc Polling Group found 65% of respondents thought legalizing marijuana in Massachusetts was the โ€œright decision.โ€ Another 22% of respondents said it was the โ€œwrong decision.โ€

The measure is one of five that have been officially certified by the secretary of stateโ€™s office to move forward in a long process. Petitions need 74,574 certified signatures to proceed in the process.

The office certified 79,032 signatures supporting a petition that would implement an all-party primary system in state elections, andย 87,408 signatures for a Galvin-backed measure that would enable people to register and vote on Election Day.

The office certified 88,132 signatures for a petition that would legalize rent increase limits, and 86,970 signatures for one that would reduce the stateโ€™s personal income tax rate from 5% to 4%.ย 

โ€œIn total, the Elections Division received eleven ballot question filings of significant size by the December 3, 2025 filing deadline,โ€ the Secretary of Stateโ€™s office said in a release. โ€œThe Division will continue to process the remaining six ballot questions ahead of its January 7, 2026 deadline to transmit qualifying petitions to the Massachusetts Legislature.โ€