Rosie Mattio, founder and CEO of Mattio Communications, and Jason Erkes, chief communications officer at Cresco Labs CRLBF, each agreed that all through their a few years in public affairs and communications, they’d by no means seen something fairly like Florida’s hashish legalization marketing campaign in assist of Modification 3.
“Huge…large,” mentioned Erkes on the Benzinga Hashish Capital Convention on Oct. 9. The panel was “One Month Out: Inside Florida’s Report-Breaking Grownup-Use Legalization Effort.”
Erkes famous the Sensible & Protected Florida marketing campaign raised at the very least $100 million to get the phrase out. Certainly, Modification 3 is the best-funded hashish legalization modification in American historical past, surpassing the earlier file set by California’s 2016 Proposition 64.
Modification 3 will go earlier than Florida voters this coming November.
One of many marketing campaign’s strengths, mentioned Mattio, was that it meets folks the place they’re — within the cities and communities throughout Florida — and the reception has been optimistic. Individuals relate to points equivalent to legal justice reform and freedom of alternative. They do not essentially should be hashish customers to get behind these fundamental ideas, Mattio mentioned. To not point out that medical marijuana has been authorized in Florida for a decade and its success “has been an instance of what an excellent program seems to be like,” she added.
Mattio and Erkes had the best reward for Sensible & Protected’s practically 800 satellite tv for pc workplaces throughout Florida, the hundreds of garden indicators, the marketing campaign’s 13 TV adverts and naturally ensuring folks have been registered to vote. “It is a political marketing campaign, in any case,” Erkes mentioned.
Panel moderator Bryna Dahlin requested concerning the current lawsuits popping up in Florida. There’s the defamation lawsuit launched by Trulieve Hashish Corp. TCNNF accusing the Florida Republican Get together of deliberately deceptive voters with a misleading TV marketing campaign advert.
That lawsuit alleges that the TV advert in query misleads voters by implying that solely massive hashish firms, equivalent to Trulieve will profit from marijuana legalization.
Then there’s Florida state Sen. Jason Pizzo (D) who’s suing the State of Florida for misusing taxpayer {dollars} to fund an advert produced by the Florida Division of Transportation opposing Modification 3.
“I usually do not assume it is a good suggestion to poke the bear,” mentioned Erkes, however on this case “one strategy to discredit a false narrative is to launch a lawsuit.” The truth is, it is an amazing PR marketing campaign, he added.
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Picture: Benzinga Hashish Capital Convention, Oct. 9, 2024, Picture by Wendy Davis
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