Answer Overview

Response rates from 2.4m UK voters.

43%
Yes
57%
No
32%
Yes
38%
No
10%
Yes, for most but not all drugs
13%
No, but decriminalise drugs that offer medicinal benefits such as marijuana
1%
Yes, and retroactively reduce sentences for those already serving time
4%
No, but increase funding for addiction prevention and rehabilitation
2%
No, and increase punishment for drug dealers
1%
No, we should pass tougher drug laws

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 2.4m UK voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 2.4m UK voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from UK voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9N429PWanswered…4mos4MO

Yes, for personal use, so that police resources can be allocated towards targeting drug smugglers and gangs instead of individual use

 @8PVJ375answered…4yrs4Y

 @8SG5GZ3answered…3yrs3Y

No, but money should be put towards rehabilitation and drugs such as marijuana should be legal as it is less harmful than legal drugs such as alcohol

 @8TMGFHZanswered…3yrs3Y

Yes and improve education on drugs so people know what they’re getting into

 @8KJS969answered…4yrs4Y

I would decriminalise all drugs as I believe in putting the emphasis on rehabilitation and a new social care plan to help people understand the effects of drugs. I think by decriminalising all drugs, this will lead to the reduction in overdoses, HIV infections, and drug related crime.

 @8QWLM56answered…4yrs4Y

Yes, but the sale, distribution and illegal growing of banned substances should still be a criminal offense.

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