XPost: alt.drugs.pot, alt.hemp.politics, rec.drugs.cannabis
From:
bliss@mouse-potato.com
Drug War Chronicle, Issue #1031 -- 8/10/18
Phillip S. Smith, Editor,
psmith@drcnet.org https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/1031
A Publication of StoptheDrugWar.org
David Borden, Executive Director,
borden@drcnet.org
"Raising Awareness of the Consequences of Drug Prohibition"
Table of Contents:
1. WHY MARIJUANA WILL PLAY A MAJOR ROLE IN THE NEXT TWO NATIONAL
ELECTIONS [FEATURE]
Advice to politicians: "If you're against cannabis, the best thing to do
is shut up about it. Nobody is with you."
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/01/why_marijuana_will_play_major
2. NEW JERSEY SUSPENDS ALL MARIJUANA PROSECUTIONS -- AT LEAST UNTIL FALL
Is this the beginning of the end of marijuana prohibition in the Garden
State?
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/jul/26/new_jersey_suspends_all
3. WHY DOES THE NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH WANT TO LEGALIZE
MARIJUANA?
It's just issued a report that provides the answers.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/jul/25/why_does_new_york_state
4. WATCH: MICHIGAN COP JAILS 80-YEAR-OLD GRANDMA OVER EXPIRED MEDICAL
MARIJUANA CARD
Police officers have discretion. It's a shame this one didn't use it.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/08/watch_michigan_cop_jails
5. WATCH: ARMED MEXICAN DRUG CARTEL CONVOY OCCUPIES MOUNTAIN HIGHWAY
WITH POLICE NOWHERE IN SIGHT
This is what Mexico is up against, and helps explain why the country’s incoming president wants to go in a different direction.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/06/watch_armed_mexican_drug_cartel
6. MEDICAL MARIJUANA UPDATE
Show Me State voters will vote on three different medical marijuana initiatives, Oklahoma finally gets some livable temporary medical
marijuana rules, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/08/medical_marijuana_update
7. THIS WEEK'S CORRUPT COPS STORIES
A small-town Ohio police chief ODs on drugs he stole from his own
department, a veteran Baltimore cop gets nailed for peddling pills, a
TSA worker goes down for participating in a cocaine conspiracy, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/08/weeks_corrupt_cops_stories
8. CHRONICLE AM: NY GOV ENDORSES MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION, STATES ASK
CONGRESS TO HELP ON BANKING, MORE... (8/2/18)
New York's governor gets behind marijuana legalization, the National
Conference of State Legislatures wants Congress to fix the legal pot
industry's banking problems, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/02/chronicle_am_ny_gov_endorses
9. CHRONICLE AM: THREE MO MEDMJ INITS QUALIFY FOR BALLOT, HOUSE PANEL
QUERIES BIG PHARMA, MORE.... (8/3/18)
Oregon's US Attorney fires a warning shot over pot, three different
Missouri medical marijuana initiatives qualify for the November ballot,
a House panel wants answers on opioids from three big pharmaceutical
companies, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/03/chronicle_am_three_mo_medmj
10. CHRONICLE AM: KEY NJ POL NOW SUPPORTS LEGAL POT, UK DRUG DEATHS
SPARK CRITICISM, MORE... (8/6/18)
New Jersey's assembly speaker gets behind marijuana legalization, Ted
Cruz attacks Beto O'Rourke as a drug legalizer, record-breaking British
drug deaths spark a critique of government drug policy, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/06/chronicle_am_key_nj_pol_now
11. CHRONICLE AM: OK LEGALIZATION INIT LOOKS LESS LIKELY, TED CRUZ
ATTACK BACKFIRES, MORE... (8/7/18)
The Oklahoma marijuana legalization initiative has far fewer signatures
than organizers claimed last week, marijuana is seeping into
congressional and senatorial campaigns, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/07/chronicle_am_ok_pot_init_group
12. CHRONICLE AM: COLOMBIA'S NEW PRESIDENT VOWS DRUG CRACKDOWN, ND POT
INIT LIVES, MORE... (8/8/18)
The Northern Marianas Islands could be the first US territory to
legalize weed, a North Dakota legalization initiative looks like it will probably make the ballot, Colombia's new president vows to resort to old prohibitionist drug war policies, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/08/chronicle_am_colombias_new
13. CHRONICLE AM: PA GOV SAYS STATE NOT READY FOR LEGAL POT, NEW FDA
GUIDELINES ON MATS, MORE... (8/9/18)
The FDA has issued new draft guidance aimed at expanding the use of medication-assisted treatments (MATs) for opioid addiction,
Pennsylvania's governor says the state isn't ready for legal weed, the
Oklahoma medical marijuana fight isn't over yet, and more.
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/09/chronicle_am_pa_gov_says_state
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================
1. WHY MARIJUANA WILL PLAY A MAJOR ROLE IN THE NEXT TWO NATIONAL
ELECTIONS [FEATURE]
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2018/aug/01/why_marijuana_will_play_major
Last week, the San Jose Convention Center hosted the National Cannabis
Industry Association's (NCIA) 2018 Cannabis Business Summit and Expo (
http://www.cannabisbusinesssummit.com). More than 7,000 marijuana
industry players and hopefuls crammed into exhibition halls and
conference rooms for the three-day confab, located squarely in the heart
of the world's largest legal marijuana market -- California.
The variety of stuff on display was mind-boggling: Armored cars, safes, "California compliant" marijuana delivery vans, multi-thousand-dollar extraction devices of gleaming metal and shining glass, lighting
systems, cooling systems, myriad forms of packaging, business management systems, POS systems, cannabis industry talent headhunters, greenhouses, modular grow fixtures, insurance companies, law firms, real estate firms
-- vegan CBD gummies -- and much, much more. And while a few tie-dyes
could be spotted in the crowds, they were few and far between.
While for most attendees the expo was all about business, the legal
marijuana business still has to ponder the specter of federal marijuana prohibition actually being enforced. And even at the state level --
where the industry can make money -- it is still constrained by the
annoying fact that adult use marijuana is only legal in nine states and
the District of Columbia. One panel of experienced marijuana watchers
zoomed in on the politics of pot law reform to try to divine what the
near future holds -- not so much for the industry, but in terms of consolidating the political victories that have already seen marijuana
move from the back alleys to, well, shiny big city convention centers.
The discussion among panelists NCIA director of governmental relations
Mike Correia; Jolene Forman, staff attorney for the Drug Policy
Alliance; and John Hudak, deputy director of the Center for Effective
Public Management and a senior fellow in governance studies at the
Brookings Institute, covered a variety of topics and sketched the
outlines of what pot politics could look like and achieve between now
and the 2020 elections.
Federal Legislation
DPA attorney Forman pointed to three pieces of federal marijuana
legislation:
* The Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States
(STATES) Act, S. 3032
(
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/115/s3032), sponsored by Sen.
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) with five Republican and four Democratic
cosponsors. The bill would modify the Controlled Substances Act so that
it would not apply to people acting in compliance with state laws in
states where it is legal.
* The Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act, S. 3174 (
https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/3174),
sponsored by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY). The bill would federally decriminalize marijuana by removing it from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act.
* The Marijuana Justice Act, S. 1689 (
https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/1689),
sponsored by Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) and cosponsored by a virtual who's
who of Democratic 2020 presidential contenders, including Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Kamala Harris (D-CA), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), and
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). It would remove marijuana from Schedule I of
the Controlled Substance Act and eliminate federal criminal penalties
for marijuana commerce.
While both the Schumer bill and the Booker bill would decriminalize
marijuana, the STATES Act, which would only apply in places it's already
legal, is more likely to gain traction, said Forman, a position seconded
by Correia.
"The STATES Act is most likely to move," said Correia, who spends his
days haunting the corridors of power on Capitol Hill as he lobbies for
the industry. "Congress is incremental."
Movement could come faster if Democrats take the House or Senate, he
said. "Maybe the Democrats will be more aggressive," Correia suggested,
drawing a comparison with movement on gay and lesbian issues in recent
years.
Not so fast, said Hudak, noting that key congressional committee chairs
have bottled up marijuana bills so far. "Until both parties stop putting
in foes of reform in leadership positions, there will be no progress,"
he said. "And it's not just the GOP." (Until a few months ago he might
have been referring to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who represents the world's largest legal pot market but who only dropped her opposition to
legalization last May in the face of a primary challenge and is only
beginning to shed last century's prohibitionist ideology.)
There is no reason for Democrats to put enemies of reform in leadership positions, Hudak said. "Cannabis is already a Democratic core value."
"Marijuana legalization could pass Congress right now," Correia argued,
"but it doesn't get any hearings; it doesn't get any votes."
If Congress Fails to Act
DPA's Forman explained that while it is now clear that states have the
right to not criminalize marijuana and not enforce federal prohibition,
a hostile Justice Department could still potentially wreak havoc.
"What is untested in the courts is whether federal preemption could
block regulation," she said. In other words, it's possible that the
Justice Department could blow up states' ability to tax and regulate the industry.
Forman noted that medical marijuana states are currently protected from
Justice Department interference by the repeated passage of amendments to spending bills blocking the DOJ from using its funds to go after medical marijuana where it is legal.
"We need the same for adult use," she said.
Without legislation protecting marijuana, "the executive branch can do
things, it could be more aggressive," said Hudak. But he added that
doing so would have a price. "That could affect the department's working relationship with the states," he warned.
Correia thought Justice Department meddling was unlikely, despite Jeff Sessions' druthers. "It makes zero sense politically to interfere," he
argued, pointing to marijuana's popularity in opinion polls.
Hudak pointed out a possible flip side to a hostile executive power. "A reform-minded president could do a lot," he said, perhaps thinking of
the Obama administration's Cole memo laying out how federal prosecutors
would lay off legal marijuana in the states. Despite Sessions having
nullified the Cole memo, it still seems to be largely the approach of
the land.
The 2018 Midterms
"This is an exciting year for cannabis policy politics," said Hudak,
pointing to the example of Texas, where progressive Democratic
challenger and legalization advocate Rep. Beto O'Rourke is closing in on incumbent Sen. Ted Cruz (R).
"Beto is getting close to Cruz, and the whole time, he's screaming about
his support for cannabis reform. That's transformational," he said. "Politicians lag behind; they've been terrified of this issue. Now it's politically beneficial. If you're against cannabis, the best thing to do
is shut up about it. Nobody is with you."
It's still an uphill battle in Texas, though. Cruz is leading O'Rourke
by 8.4 points in the Real Clear Politics average of polls (
https://realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2018/senate/tx/texas_senate_cruz_vs_orourke-6310.html).
But that's only half as much as Cruz's 16-point victory in his 2012
Senate race, and O'Rourke has three more months to move up. And just
today, a new Texas Lyceum poll (
http://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/399858-poll-senate-race-between-cruz-orourke-a-dead-heat)
had Cruz leading only 41% to 39%, well within the poll's margin of error.
According to Correia, trying to work with Republicans on Capitol Hill
has led to lessons learned: "We see no point in trying to work with the
GOP any longer," he said. "We'll be giving money to challengers in
competitive races. The Democrats are thinking about this; they will run
on marijuana."
The 2020 Election
It looks like marijuana is going to be a popular issue in 2020 -- or at
least the people thinking about running for the Democratic presidential nomination seem to think so.
"Potential Democratic candidates are getting their names on big pot
bills," Forman noted.
Marijuana is also likely to be on state ballots in 2020, and that will
be good for Democrats, said Hudak.
"There will be more initiatives, and those drive Democratic turnout," he argued. "In 2012, Democrats in Colorado voted for cannabis -- and for president, too. Democratic politicians are seeing this."
But Correia said the current president could be a wild card here (as in
so many other places): "Trump might just decide to steal the issue, to
take it off the table."
Given that Trump has signaled support for the STATES Act, and given
Trump's willingness to adopt any position if he thinks it brings him
political gain, that's not impossible. And it would take some
immeasurable oomph out of Democratic sails.
The Next States to Legalize
Michigan will vote on a legalization initiative in November, and there
will be efforts in Arizona and Ohio in 2020, the panelists said. But
grassroots initiatives could also bubble up in places like North Dakota
and Oklahoma, both of which saw serious efforts this year that will
almost certainly not make the November ballot but do lay the groundwork
for the next cycle.
Vermont became the first state to free the weed via the legislative
process (although it does not allow retail sales), but Correia sketched
out how the next couple of years could see Connecticut, Delaware,
Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island fall in line
behind it. By the time November 2020 rolls around, most of New England
and the mid-Atlantic states could be legal, with Illinois and Michigan
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