Initiative 65 and 65A are the competing measures in Mississippi on the subject of medical marijuana. 65 is the citizen initiative while 65A is the legislative alternative. There will be two questions regarding this measure; the first question for approval of either and the second for the preference of 65 or 65A. For either initiative to be approved, the first question must win a majority (50%+1). If the first question has majority support, then the initiative with the most votes on the second question will become law. However, there is a catch. The initiative must win 40% of total ballots on the second question. In the event both 65 or 65A fail to get 40% of total ballots on the second question, then neither become law, even if the first question has a majority "EITHER" vote. I will attempt to explain the competing initiatives, both questions, and analyze whether or not 65 or 65A have a chance at being approved.
Background
65 was put on the ballot after getting the required signatures. The alternative, 65A, was put on the ballot by the legislature during the 2020 session. You can see the differences between the two initiatives in the photo below. Essentially, 65A is a more restrictive version of 65. Also, 65 has parameters already whereas 65A's specifics would be set by the legislature later.
This is the second time in recent years that an alternate measure has been added to the ballot. In 2015, Initiative 42A competed with Initiative 42 on a school funding measure. In the end, the first question of that measure failed to received a majority which made the result of the second question irrelevant.
First question
The first question is essentially an up or down vote on if you want a medical marijuana program in the state of Mississippi. The image below from Ballotpedia summarizes the two options on the first question of this measure.
So, medical marijuana supporters will choose "either measure" and opponents will choose "neither measure." Simple enough.
Analysis
The first question is likely to have majority support from the Mississippi electorate. A poll conducted in May had support for medical marijuana in Mississippi at 81%. But the way the question was worded was odd and potentially increased support in the poll. A better indicator would be the 2016 medical marijuana initiative in Arkansas. In 2016, Arkansas voters approved a medical marijuana proposal with 53% of the vote. Arkansas is not a perfect comparison for Mississippi, but both are rural states in the south that have minimal economic development.
We'll take a look at the white vote and the black vote for Arkansas' Issue 6. Then attempt to extrapolate this to the Mississippi electorate. White voters in the Natural State aren't quite as conservative as those in Mississippi. But they are generally right-leaning and support the Republican Party. Black voters in both states vote for Democrats at roughly the same clip.
I took results from 20 heavily-white precincts across the state and tried to balance urban and rural areas. It was about a 50-50 split. Black voters went for the initiative at around a 70-30 split. I did a similar thing with these precincts by taking a smattering of precincts from around the state while balancing urban and rural in an attempt to get the most accurate demographic breakdown.
Based on this, we can expect white voters in Mississippi to vote "EITHER" on the first question at about a 45-50% rate. As previously mentioned, Mississippi whites are a little more conservative than Arkansas whites, which might keep it a little below the 50% mark. But opinion on this continues to trend in the direction of support (this initiative actually failed in 2012 in Arkansas before winning in 2016). So we'll predict it in this range for white voters. Support among African-American voters is likely to be in the 70-75% range based on the Arkansas results. "EITHER" may run a few points ahead of the 70% AA support in Arkansas because of the aforementioned shifting opinion nationally on this issue.
Now we need to extrapolate this to the Mississippi electorate. Mississippi's voting-age population is 60% white and 40% non-white (with near 100% of the majority of this population being African-American). But whites tend to be registered to vote at a higher rate and tend to turn out in elections at a higher rate. So we'll say the electorate on November is 68% white and 32% non-white. Mike Espy has said that his 2018 election was a turnout of 68/32 so this should be close or maybe even exact. When plugging in 47.5% white support and 72.5% non-white support (i.e. the middle between the two ranges given), you get "EITHER" winning 55.5% of the vote on the first question.
Based on the range earlier (53-58%), Initiative 65 would need about 70-75% of people that voted "EITHER" on the first question to vote 65 on the second. It should be noted that in 2015 that some people marked 42 on the second question while voting "NEITHER" or leaving the first question blank. We know this because in several precincts and even counties 42 had more votes than "EITHER." Given the confusing nature of the competing measures, we can expect this to happen again to some degree, but it's impossible to pin an exact number or percentage down. Initiative 65 is likely to finish above 65A on the second question. As noted earlier, a significant chunk of people that would vote 65A on Q2 will leave it blank. If same the trends from 2015's Init42 happen with medical marijuana in 2020, then about 35-40% of "NEITHER" voters on the first question will leave the second blank. We can safely assume that voters that leave the 2nd question blank would overwhelmingly support 65A over 65. Whereas close to 100% of "EITHER" voters will vote on the 2nd question (whether that be for 65 or 65A). Precincts and counties that strongly supported "EITHER" on the school funding measure in 2015 had few blanks or undervotes compared to precincts and counties that voted heavily for "NEITHER" on the first question. TL;DR on the Question #2It's difficult to say what will happen here because of the competing measures, but 65 has to be considered the favorite over 65A. People that would vote 65A are much more likely to leave the second question compared to 65 supporters who are almost certain to vote on the second question. Most people that vote "EITHER" on the first question will support 65 over 65A but the big mystery is to what extent. If it's closer to a 50/50 split, then 65A is in excellent shape. But if 65 can get 75% of "EITHER" voters then it's probable to win. This is assuming blank ballots are in line with what they were in 2015 with Initiative 42. The fewer blank ballots on the second question increase the chances of 1) some sort of program getting approved and 2) 65A finishing ahead of 65. Obviously, the higher % of "EITHER" voters on the first question means there's a better chance that 65 finishes ahead of 65A.
One of these two initiatives stand a good chance of being approved. Based on the Arkansas results in 2016 and adjusting them for Mississippi's demographics, support for the first question is likely to receive the majority required. This is the hard part. Initiative 42 in 2015 received the 40% required on the second question in 2015 but "EITHER" did not win the majority needed on the first question. On the second question, thanks to quirky laws regarding alternate initiatives, 65 or 65A could become law even if up to 60% of voters do not vote for it. We can expect a sizable percentage of voters to leave the second question blank. It's hard to estimate the exact percentage of blank ballots on the 2nd question, but somewhere between 15 and 20 percent seems about right. Close to all of these will be medical marijuana opponents who would choose 65A over 65 if they had a choice. Because of this, 65A is likely to finish behind 65 on the 2nd question.