Wednesday marks another April 20 where marijuana aficionados are forced to contend with a patchwork of state and local laws with varying degrees of tolerance for the drug. This month, the House, for the second time, passed legislation that would legalize marijuana throughout the country.
As a relatively recent convert to the cause, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is still keeping the faith that his chamber will soon follow suit. But looking at the challenges he’s facing, I’m forced to ask: What is Schumer smoking?
What is Schumer smoking?
Eighteen states around the country, and the District of Columbia, have fully legalized weed; only four still ban products with THC, the compound that gets users high. A record share of Americans — 68 percent — supports full legalization, Gallup found last year. Even 50 percent of Republicans surveyed were in favor of legal weed. But at the federal level, marijuana is still considered a Schedule I drug, treated much the same as cocaine and heroin.
The dichotomy between what the public wants and what federal law restricts makes less and less sense as time goes on. The dissonance is both a practical limitation on the burgeoning legal marijuana industry and, more philosophically, an erosion of the supremacy of federal authority over state law.
The Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act, which passed on a mostly party-line vote in the House, would bring federal law in line with popular sentiment by decriminalizing marijuana and setting up a federal tax on cannabis sales. Critically, it would also address the gaping racial disparity in marijuana convictions, setting up a process for people’s criminal records to be expunged.
But that won’t be the legislation that’s eventually presented to the Senate. Instead, Schumer is working on his own proposal, which he first announced last year. The draft Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act runs along the same lines as the MORE Act, but Schumer and his co-drafters — Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Cory Booker, D-N.J. — are hoping to craft a bill that will get buy-in from their full caucus.
That’s looking trickier than you might assume given the popularity of reform measures. At least two Democratic senators — Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire and Joe Manchin of West Virginia — have expressed skepticism about full legalization. Given the likelihood of a Republican filibuster, that would require Schumer to get at least 12 GOP votes to move forward any comprehensive bill.
Sorry to be a buzzkill, but we’ve seen how well that strategy has worked on issues like voting rights and police reform. And the outreach that would be needed to actually make the case to Republican senators has been limited, according to MJBizDaily, which reports on the business of marijuana.








