Nevada Republican Sen. Dean Heller has become the latest lawmaker to sign onto a groundbreaking bipartisan bill that would make medical marijuana use legal under federal law.
Is this a sign the bipartisanship is truly budding in this new Congress? Bad puns aside, a development like this would be unthinkable just a couple years ago. But clearly the political tide is turning when it comes to pot, with three states legalizing it for recreational use and several more embracing the drug for medical purposes.
RELATED: Bipartisan bill introduced for medicinal marijuana
“The time has come for the federal government to stop impeding the doctor-patient relationship in states that have decided their own medical marijuana policies. This bipartisan legislation puts Americans who are suffering first by allowing Nevada’s medical marijuana patients, providers, and businesses that are in compliance with state law, to no longer be in violation of federal law and vulnerable to federal prosecution,” Heller said in a statement on Wednesday.
The bill which was unveiled earlier this week by its co-sponsors, Democratic Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand and Cory Booker, as well as GOP senator and potential 2016 presidential hopeful Rand Paul, aims to make transport, access and financial backing of medical marijuana easier and less stigmatized.
Cannabis can treat a variety of illnesses, incl MS, cancer, epilepsy & seizures. Wrong for patients & doctors to fear prosecution.#CARERSAct
— Kirsten Gillibrand (@SenGillibrand) March 10, 2015
Booker spoke to this very issue when he unveiled the bill on Tuesday. “Otherwise law-abiding Americans — bankers, business people, veterans, families — are fearful of unnecessary, expensive, life-disrupting investigations and prosecutions,” he said. “Today we join together to say enough is enough.”









