Albuquerque Journal

McConnell pushes for hemp OK

Crop making comeback in Ky.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Pressed for time and pushed to move quickly on a border wall and criminal justice reform, the Senate’s top leader has his own priority in Congress’ lame-duck session: passing a farm bill that includes a full pardon for hemp, the non-intoxicati­ng cousin of marijuana that’s making a comeback in his home state.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has guaranteed that his proposal to make hemp a legal agricultur­al commodity, removing it from the federal list of controlled substances, will be part of the final farm bill, a crucial measure for rural America and Kentucky, where the Republican senator faces re-election in 2020. He places it on a par with federal spending bills as action Congress must take before the end of the year.

Keeping that promise would cap a decadeslon­g journey to overcome the stigma associated with the crop, which McConnell himself did not initially embrace wholeheart­edly. But in recent years, the quintessen­tial establishm­ent Republican has been all in for the hemp revolution.

McConnell put himself on the conference committee assigned to negotiate a compromise farm bill. Work requiremen­ts for food stamps, known as the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, have been the biggest stumbling block holding up an agreement.

Kentucky has emerged as a leader in developing a hemp industry.

 ??  ?? Sen. Mitch McConnell
Sen. Mitch McConnell

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