Lodi News-Sentinel

Schumer pushes Senate on pot laws as states leap ahead

- Steven T. Dennis

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is pushing the Senate toward lifting the federal prohibitio­n on marijuana with legislatio­n that would represent the biggest overhaul of federal drug policy in decades.

The bill that Schumer is drafting with Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden of Oregon and New Jersey Senator Cory Booker is still being written. Though they avoided the term legalizati­on when announcing their plan, it is expected to remove marijuana from the list of controlled substances and tax and regulate it on the federal level while leaving states able to enforce their own laws regarding the drug.

Their proposal goes beyond decriminal­ization, which President Joe Biden voiced support for during his campaign, and may be a stretch for some Senate Democrats. But it taps into building public sentiment for legalizati­on and moves by states to change marijuana laws, including Schumer’s home state.

New York became the 16th state to legalize pot for recreation­al use. The Assembly and Senate passed a bill that would allow personal cultivatio­n as well as taxing and regulating commercial sales, and Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the legislatio­n Wednesday. Several other states also are moving toward legalizati­on.

In Washington, the House passed a major decriminal­ization bill in December for the first time but it was kept off the Senate floor by then-Majority

Leader Mitch McConnell. Prospects for revamping marijuana laws have vastly improved with Schumer now in charge of the Senate’s agenda, but getting the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster remains a major challenge. In addition to winning over Biden on legalizati­on, Schumer has yet to line up all 50 senators who caucus with Democrats — some of whom have long been skeptical of legalizati­on — let alone at least 10 Republican­s.

The politics of marijuana have been shifting in both parties as voters in both red states and blue have voted to legalize it. Seven Senate Republican­s led by Steve Daines, a conservati­ve from Montana, have signed on so far to Oregon Democrat Jeff Merkley’s SAFE Banking Act, more modest legislatio­n allowing marijuana businesses to have easier access to the banking system and capital markets. Others back bills giving cannabis businesses access to insurance products and still more back additional medical research.

Schumer, who has been strategizi­ng with advocates of legalizati­on, wants to go much further with the bill he, Booker and Wyden are are working on, and his biggest ally is a marked shift in public opinion.

Gallup found in November a record 68% of adults backing legalizati­on, up 20 points from 2012, when Colorado and Washington became the first two states to fully legalize the drug. And a 2019 Pew poll found 91% say it should be legal at least for medical use.

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