For the first time ever, Congress is taking action to protect — not condemn — medical marijuana use.
Shortly after midnight Friday, the GOP-led House passed a measure that would prohibit the Drug Enforcement Agency from raiding medical marijuana activities in states where it is legal. It gained broad bipartisan support with 170 Democrats and 49 Republicans voting in favor of the bill, with a final 219-189 tally.
Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher of California attached the measure to a routine spending bill. It would block the Justice Department from using federal dollars to interfere with medical marijuana operations that are legal in almost half of states in the country.
“Some people are suffering, and if a doctor feels that he needs to prescribe something to alleviate that suffering, it is immoral for this government to get in the way,” Rohrabacher said, raising his voice on the House floor Thursday night. “And that’s what’s happening.”
The measure still faces several procedural hurdles. The Senate is expected to pass its own funding bill, meaning the amendment would have to survive the reconciliation process in a joint conference. And that’s even before it makes it to the president’s desk for his signature.









