Legalise Party NSW

Legalise Party NSW Legalise Party NSW is a Branch of Legalise Cannabis Australia. www.legalise.org.au This means consumers are better informed about the cannabis they use.

The Legalise Cannabis Party advocates for positive policy reform relating to cannabis for both health and personal users. Reduce harm
The criminalisation of cannabis use disproportionately harms young people and indigenous people, leads to massive levels of violence and corruption, and fails to curb youth access. Create jobs
Legalising and regulating cannabis will bring one of the nation’s largest

cash crops under the rule of law. This will create jobs and economic opportunities in the formal economy instead of the illicit market. Save money
Scarce law enforcement resources will be better used to ensure public safety while reducing corrections and court costs. Governments would acquire significant new sources of revenue from regulating cannabis sales. Promote safety
Cannabis product testing is becoming a standard requirement for legalised cannabis markets. https://legalise.org.au

Join the Nimbin MardiGrass paradeFirst weekend in May
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The NSW government has flagged it will canvas “fairer” driving laws to allow more than one million medicinal cannabis pa...
05/03/2026

The NSW government has flagged it will canvas “fairer” driving laws to allow more than one million medicinal cannabis patients with a prescription to drive without being penalised.

“Medicinal cannabis patients are being penalised by out of date laws that have really no bearing on their own ability to drive, ” Will Tregoning, CEO of Unharm, said.

As of now, it is illegal in NSW to drive with any amount of THC, a psychoactive component of cannabis, even if you have a medical prescription.

The NSW government has flagged it will canvas “fairer” driving laws to allow more than one million medicinal cannabis patients with a prescription to drive without being penalised.

16/11/2025

Telling truth to idiocracy

In Australia, the NSW Government has responded to a report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the...
28/09/2025

In Australia, the NSW Government has responded to a report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the state.

A related parliamentary inquiry was established in March 2024, the final report from which was released in June this year. Among the recommendations made were decriminalising the use and possession of cannabis with view to consideration of further reforms towards a regulated legalised cannabis market.

The report also raised concerns concerning importers facing less regulatory burden than local producers and the continued prosecution of people who drive unimpaired with cannabis in their system, particularly medicinal cannabis patients. This is an issue not just confined to New South Wales, but most Australian states and territories.

In Australia, the NSW Government has responded to a report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the state.

The final report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the Australian state of New South Wales was r...
01/07/2025

The final report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the Australian state of New South Wales was released last week.

In March 2024, an inquiry was established to delve into and report on the matter by a committee chaired by the Legalise Cannabis Party’s Jeremy Buckingham. Its first report was published in October last year, which was released after three public hearings and a site visit.

The committee made a number of findings and recommendations in that report, urging the State Government to consider a range of reforms as part of its Drug Summit. Among those was reducing penalties for possession of cannabis, restricting police search powers for small quantities, and implementing new and reforming existing schemes to create a presumption of diversion for low level cannabis offending.

However, so far there has been no Government response to the Drug Summit.

While the findings of the committee in its first report stand, it has built on this with a final report looking into evidence concerning use and driving, public health issues, federal regulations and organised crime.

Among the issues of concern:

Importers of cannabis facing less regulatory burden than local producers.

The continued criminalisation of people who drive unimpaired with cannabis in their system, particularly medicinal cannabis patients.
On a related note, New South Wales Greens MLC Cate Faehrmann, also a member of the Inquiry committee, recently introduced the Road Transport Amendment (Medicinal Cannabis-Exemptions from Offences) Bill 2025 to NSW parliament. This seeks to exclude medical cannabis patients from application of driving related offences where a legally prescribed illicit drug is present in a person’s oral fluid, blood or urine.

But back to the report, the first steps the Committee wants to see:

Removing the possibility of gaol time for possession of small quantities of cannabis. Currently a 2-year maximum penalty, the majority of the committee consider this to be draconian.
Decriminalise the use and possession of cannabis.
Following assessment and review, the Government should then consider reforms towards a safe, regulated legalised cannabis market.

“New South Wales has a wealth of information from this inquiry, interjurisdictional examples, and extensive research developed over the years on effective models of cannabis regulation,” said Mr. Buckingham in the report. “The majority of committee members are persuaded that the Government should progress staged law reform process towards a legalised, regulated model for cannabis in New South Wales.”

The final report on the impact of the regulatory framework for cannabis in the Australian state of New South Wales was released last week.

A recent parliamentary report is calling on the New South Wales government to decriminalise personal use and possession ...
26/06/2025

A recent parliamentary report is calling on the New South Wales government to decriminalise personal use and possession of cannabis.

The Legislative Council committee, chaired by Jeremy Buckingham from the Legalise Cannabis Party, released the inquiry into the impacts of the regulatory framework for cannabis on Friday, and found current criminal regulation of cannabis is failing to reduce use, criminalising users, and forcing them to access cannabis through illicit markets fuelling organised crime.

In addition to decriminalisation, the report recommends the state government develop and expand the domestic medicinal cannabis sector, remove the potential of custodial sentences for adults found in possession of small quantities of cannabis for personal use, and review the impact of decriminalisation in the hopes of creating a safe, regulated, and accessible statewide market for legal cannabis.

The recommendations come only months after the state’s Drug Summit late last year, held for the first time since 1999. The subsequential report, tabled in April, put forward 56 recommendations across key areas such as prevention, early intervention, community support, stigma, workforce, and reform.

Move welcomed by advocacy groups
Buckingham’s Legalise Cannabis Party is attempting to pass legislation in three stages, the first one modelled after the economic and social success of the ACT’s cannabis reforms.

Premier Chris Minns has formerly rejected the movement for decriminalising cannabis for personal use on the basis of maintaining an election promise made during his 2023 campaign.

“We’re not going to break an election commitment,” he said at the time.

Groups such as the NSW Council for Civil Liberties have been advocating for the decriminalisation and regulation of cannabis across Australia for years, and say it’s time for the NSW Government to get on with the job.

“The public, the evidence and the parliamentary inquiry are all clear in their support for the decriminalisation of cannabis use and possession,” said President of the NSWCCL, Timothy Roberts.

“Cannabis use should not be in the remit of the criminal law. With over 700,000 people in NSW using cannabis every year, most do not experience drug dependency. These are our neighbours, family members and colleagues.”

Cannabis is currently decriminalised in the Northern Territory, South Australia, and the ACT.

A report from the Pennington Institute found that Australia spent $1.7 billion on law reform resources related to cannabis offences in 2015-2016, which rises to $2.1 billion in 2023-2024 when adjusted for inflation.

“The story of cannabis policing is a shameful part of the failed war on drugs,” said Roberts. “First Nations people in particular are systemically overrepresented, over-imprisoned and are less likely to be offered support of diversion programs.”

The government is being urged to take immediate action to implement the report’s recommendations.

https://cityhub.com.au/report-calls-for-decriminalisation-of-personal-cannabis-use/?

A recent parliamentary report is calling on the New South Wales government to decriminalise personal use and possession of cannabis.

Legalise Party NSW candidates for the House of Representatives by electorate. Calare –––– Sue RayeRichmond – Vivian "Mac...
25/04/2025

Legalise Party NSW candidates for the House of Representatives by electorate.

Calare –––– Sue Raye
Richmond – Vivian "Mac" McMahon
Gilmore ––– Adrian Carle
Cowper ––– Megan Mathew
Dobell –––– Tim Claydon
Hunter –––– Andrew Fenwick
Lyne –––––– Keys Manley
Paterson –– Daniel Dryden
Robertson – Thomas Lillicrap
Werriwa ––– Andrew Murphy

Authorised by Suzette Luyken, Legalise Cannabis Party, Sydney

Here are our Legalise Cannabis candidates for the House of Reps for New South Wales Check them out here - https://www.le...
21/04/2025

Here are our Legalise Cannabis candidates for the House of Reps for New South Wales
Check them out here - https://www.legalisecannabis.org.au/meet_our_house_of_representative_candidates

Sue Raye - Candidate for Calare, NSW

Vivian (Mac) McMahon - Candidate for Richmond, NSW

Tom Lillicrap - Candidate for Robertson, NSW

Andrew Murphy - Candidate for Werriwa, NSW

Adrian Carle - Candidate for Gilmore, NSW

Tim Claydon - Candidate for Dobell, NSW

Megan Mathew - Candidate for Cowper, NSW

Daniel Dryden - Candidate for Paterson, NSW

Keys Manley - Candidate for Lyne, NSW

Andrew Fenwick - Candidate for Hunter NSW

Authorised by Suzette Luyken, Legalise Cannabis Party, Sydney

Address

51 Cullen Street
Nimbin, NSW
2480

Telephone

+61266890326

Website

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