i guess i mean just in general that it was going to lose. just checked the la times and its at 56 to 44 with 18 in. 
Right. In the desperate race to be first, many outlets are reporting that it's been killed in spite of having less that 1/4 of the vote in. Politico for one.
It will be back in 2012 and will benefit from a higher youth turnout along with the now-better-established legalization front.
It lost 47% to 53%. over 3million voters on both sides. I don't know if you are correct in thinking the 2012 election will get it done. If the economy improves by then there may not be such a big push by fiscally concerned constituents. This may have been the best chance it will ever have. That's just a guess though. What do you think?
Drug reformers long ago, in an effort to have the perception of the movement migrate from stoned-out hippies vs. cops realized that the better argument for the 'legalization' of marijuana was to affix it a "tax and regulate" title. In fact, the last ditch campaign commercial by Prop 19 proponents said that Prop 19 would 'tax and control marijuana like alcohol, generate billions for local communities, allow police to focus on violent crime and put drug cartels out of business." Had this been even 10 years ago the commercial might have featured Cypress Hill in a smoked-out cadillac rolling down the window telling you to vote "Si" on 19. I think the movement has come a very long way in a short amount of time. IMO, more progress in 5 years than in the 20 before them.
I think they missed the proverbial boat though. Instead of emphasizing the amount of money potentially made by taxing and regulating (remember taxing being one of those buzzwords) I believe that the effort should have been made towards the amount of money currently spent i.e. being added to the deficit for drug enforcement. Deficit hawks were populated in the moderate camp - the ones needed to pass this.
2012 was the year the movement was hoping for anyways, with the belief that older more conservative voters come out for mid-term elections obviously not the constituent that will vote for you.
Assuming that the movement stays unified and that 2012 won't be much better economically I think tax and regulate has a better chance than it did yesterday.