Newsweek

What Are Republican­s Smoking?

Die-hard conservati­ves like John Boehner and Greg Abbott are suddenly high on the legalizati­on of cannabis. Is it about the potential health benefits, as they suggest, or hooking young voters?

- BY ALEXANDRA HUTZLER

Suddenly conservati­ves are high on legalizing cannabis.

Jason isaac, a fourthgene­ration Texan and conservati­ve state representa­tive, has a clear memory of his first mind-expanding encounter with marijuana.

It was January 2015, and the Texas state Capitol building was swarming with lawmakers returning to work. Two women were sitting on the stairwell opposite his office, waiting for him. He sat down with the pair—his constituen­ts—and heard their stories. One had a child with intractabl­e epilepsy, the other a child with severe autism. Both said their young kids suffered uncontroll­able seizures, hurting themselves and family members. Prescripti­on medication­s had consistent­ly failed to treat the symptoms. The moms were asking for the freedom to try something new. Cannabidio­l (CBD)—A chemical compound in marijuana that does not make people high—is believed to alleviate seizures. But giving it to their children in any form would put the women on the wrong side of Texas law.

And raising the issue, Isaac knew, would put him on the wrong side of the Republican Party.

For decades, marijuana legalizati­on was a nonstarter in Washington, and particular­ly in Republican politics. In a viewpoint still embodied by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the party considered cannabis a dangerous gateway drug; it contribute­d to the degradatio­n of Christian morals and needed to be controlled through strict policing. “Good people don’t smoke marijuana,” Sessions has said.

Just a few years ago, being a conservati­ve lawmaker and wanting to talk about marijuana made you an outsider, and to support legalizati­on was a kind of political suicide, seen as an abandonmen­t of the Republican Party’s deeply entrenched identifica­tion with traditiona­l values and the war on drugs. And nowhere was that stigma more intense than in Texas.

But as state experiment­ation with legalizati­on grew, media coverage of marijuana’s supposed health benefits increased, and public opinion and demographi­cs shifted, Republican­s—some of whom had touted their hard-line stances as unalterabl­e— began to soften.

In another case that moved Isaac, Child Protective Services investigat­ed a father for giving his 17-year-old daughter marijuana vapor during violent seizures. A viral video showed the girl repeatedly punching herself in the face until her father administer­ed the drug. She calmed down almost instantly. “Do you think he’s a criminal?” Isaac asked his colleagues after presenting the video during a 2017 legislativ­e session. “Because the state of Texas does.”

Greg Abbott, the Republican governor of Texas, signed the Compassion­ate Use Act into law later that year. It allowed qualifying patients to have access to low-tetrahydro­cannabinol cannabis. (THC is the main psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana.)

Then, at the state’s 2018 Republican Party convention in San Antonio in June, nearly 10,000 conservati­ve politician­s voted to revise the party platform on marijuana. The changes included supporting industrial hemp, decriminal­izing small amounts of marijuana possession and urging the federal government to reclassify cannabis from a Schedule 1 to a Schedule 2 drug.

These planks, while still some of the most conservati­ve approaches to marijuana policy in the country, were a marked departure from the party’s position a few years prior. And they’re indicative of

the transforma­tion happening with Republican voters and officials nationwide.

The motives are mixed. Some, like Isaac, were moved by arguments about its medical uses. For others, the shift is an attempt at criminal justice reform after years of racial discrimina­tion. Some conservati­ve lawmakers tout marijuana policy changes in the name of federalism and small government, and others say it might be the only bipartisan issue left in Congress. Regardless, Republican­s can’t deny that marijuana legalizati­on is popular among younger, more diverse voters who could help the party survive.

A ‘Culture Under Attack’

republican­s—especially texans—have a long history of trying to eliminate marijuana. El Paso was the first city in the United States to ban the drug, approving a measure in 1914 strictly prohibitin­g the sale or possession of cannabis in any form. It was the state’s panicked response to the flood of immigrants crossing the southern border, fleeing the upheaval of the Mexican Revolution, leafy plant in hand.

Soon, cannabis became a symbol of the fear of the Spanish-speaking newcomers. It wasn’t long before politician­s and newspapers began calling Mexican cannabis use a “marijuana menace.” A New York Times article from July 1927 highlighte­d the supposed plight of a widowed mother who allegedly went mad from marijuana use, running under the headline “Mexican Family Go Insane.”

The drug became federally defined as a Schedule 1 narcotic in the early 1970s, just as Africaname­ricans gained greater equality through the civil rights movement. Prosecutio­ns of nonviolent drug offenses decimated black communitie­s, and today nearly 80 percent of people in federal prison for drug offenses are black or Latino. Over 50 percent of all drug arrests in 2010 were marijuana-related.

Few issues move quickly in Washington, D.C., but experts and lawmakers generally agree that support for marijuana grew improbably fast: Since 2012, about 30 states have legalized marijuana in some form, and nine states have allowed recreation­al use. Residents of Washington state can have legal marijuana delivered to their front door as easily as

“Do you think he’s a CRIMINAL?”

Isaac asked his colleagues about a father who administer­ed medical marijuana to his daughter. “Because the state of Texas does.” — JASON ISAAC

a pizza for dinner. Pot shops now outnumber Starbucks stores in states such as Colorado and Oregon. William Weld, the former Republican governor of Massachuse­tts, calls the sudden conservati­ve change of heart on the drug a “tectonic shift.” And he would know. Weld now serves on the board of a cannabis company alongside John Boehner, the former house speaker who famously said in 2009 that he was “unalterabl­y opposed” to decriminal­izing the drug. In April, Boehner and Weld announced their new role in Acreage Holdings, a multimilli­on-dollar corporatio­n involved in cultivatin­g, processing and dispensing operations across 12 states—with plans to keep on expanding. The company touted the duo’s “unmatched experience.”

Weld was a natural fit. The former governor emerged as a lonely voice for marijuana policy change in 1991. He was so alone in his support of cannabis that national Republican­s didn’t even bother to react. It would be decades before the grassroots mobilizati­on for legalizati­on would seriously start to turn heads in conservati­ve circles.

Boehner, on the other hand, spent his career in federal government as a formidable foe of marijuana. In 1999, he voted yes on prohibitin­g medical cannabis in Washington, D.C., and told constituen­ts he was vehemently opposed to legalizati­on of cannabis or any other Schedule 1 drug—a distinctio­n marijuana shares with heroin and ecstasy. The Ohio congressma­n reiterated his resistance in the waning days of his tenure as speaker, in September 2015. In the four years that Boehner ran Congress, nearly a half a million people, mostly black and Latino, were arrested for selling marijuana.

Boehner tells Newsweek that during his tenure in the House he watched as state after state passed referendum­s approving the use of medical—or, in some cases, recreation­al—marijuana. Despite the spreading support, he says he never thought about doing anything at the federal level.

“But I kind of feel like I’m just like most of America, who found myself adamantly opposed years ago and over the years have begun to change my outlook,”

I’m just like most of America who found myself ADAMANTLY opposed years ago and have begun to change my outlook. — JOHN BOEHNER

he says. He didn’t think he would join the board at Acreage Holdings, but he says he changed his mind at the last minute because it’s “the right thing to do.” (Boehner also likely stands to make a decent profit from the venture as the marijuana market grows.)

Ninety-four percent of Americans support medical marijuana, and two in every three adults say they believe that cannabis should be legalized for recreation­al adult use. Some recent polling shows over a 30 percent increase in marijuana favorabili­ty since 2000. Over 60 percent of Republican voters younger than 40 approve of decriminal­izing marijuana use, though middle-aged conservati­ves are split down the middle on legalizati­on, and the older generation opposes it by more than two to one.

One of the simplest reasons for public support of marijuana is that a lot of people use it. And those who don’t almost always know someone who does— sometimes even their elected Republican politician­s.

Representa­tive Dana Rohrabache­r, a conservati­ve from California who championed his state’s legalizati­on effort, tells Newsweek he went through a two-year stint in his early 20s of smoking weed on a regular basis. (Not every single day, he quickly clarified, joking that he was much more of a “tequila man” than a pothead.) Rohrabache­r says he hadn’t touched the drug again until recently, when he used cannabidio­l to ease the pain of a shoulder replacemen­t.

Elected officials are quick to say the increase in support is a direct reflection of growing belief in its health benefits. For decades, Rohrabache­r notes, the singular federal lab responsibl­e for conducting marijuana research was at the University of Mississipp­i. Now, more clinical labs are slowly popping up around the country, testing things like how the drug treats pain and its effect on everyday tasks, like driving or using an ipad.

Pot advocates preach the drug’s versatile uses. Adherents claim the plant can stimulate appetite, or serve as an anti-inflammato­ry, an analgesic or a

bronchodil­ator. Some say they need it to fall asleep at night. Others even use it to cure problems as harmless as the hiccups. But many of the rumored health benefits haven’t been scientific­ally tested, as the drug’s illegal status makes research difficult.

Lawmakers who espouse the little-researched medical advantages, like Boehner and Rohrabache­r, say Republican­s need to “get out of the way” and allow the scientific experiment­ation to take place.

Even so, Rohrabache­r’s admission of using cannabidio­l while in office was jarring. But the congressma­n says he has always believed that the conservati­ve fight against the drug has never had anything to do with government or politics: It was a battlegrou­nd of the culture wars.

“Frankly, I’m a Christian, and I lead a conservati­ve lifestyle. I’m married, and I don’t cheat on my wife, and we have three lovely children,” Rohrabache­r says, offering the defense anti-weed Republican­s had been using for decades. The countercul­ture movement had alienated conservati­ves, and marijuana ended up caught in the crossfire of what the congressma­n calls the party’s “irrational reaction.” It doesn’t help, he adds, that Congress always reflects what the norms were a decade earlier. Today, it seems the government is catching up on a drug policy that Americans have wanted for years.

The ‘Federalism Experiment’

amid the flood of controvers­ial comments from Donald Trump on the 2016 campaign trail, marijuana advocates were heartened by his seemingly open-minded position on cannabis. In an interview on a small radio program in Michigan, he said he supported medical marijuana. Any other policy platform, he added, should be left up to the states.

After four months in the Oval Office, Trump made his first statement as president about the issue of marijuana at the federal level. Desperate to get a $1.1 trillion spending bill passed, Trump approved a measure—created by Rohrabache­r—that disallowed the Department of Justice from prosecutin­g

marijuana businesses in states that legalized the drug. The rest of 2017 proved to be fruitful for the legal market, as sales hit nearly $10 billion—a 33 percent rise from 2016.

Only Sessions stood in the way. Rohrabache­r says the attorney general has been nothing short of a “catastroph­e”; others say Sessions’s appointmen­t was an obvious, immediate obstacle for any marijuana market. After all, Sessions once commented about the Ku Klux Klan, “I thought those guys were OK until I learned they smoked pot.”

The former Alabama senator sent the industry into a tailspin when he announced that federal prosecutor­s could decide for themselves whether to press cases against pot growers, sellers or users for violating federal law.

The posture outraged leading lawmakers in states where residents had overwhelmi­ngly voted to legalize the drug. Senator Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican, vowed to block the president’s Department of Justice nominees until he received a commitment that his state’s rights would not be infringed. Gardner tells Newsweek that in a sit-down meeting with the president in April, Trump said leaving cannabis laws up to the states was “the right thing to do and that we’re not going back.”

Gardner then went on to create the Strengthen­ing the 10th Amendment Through Entrusting States (STATES) Act, along with Massachuse­tts Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren. The bill would eliminate any federal prosecutio­n of marijuana users or sellers in states that had legally authorized such actions. “We’re looking at it. But I probably will end up supmedical porting that, yes,” Trump told reporters in June, striking a big blow to Sessions.

In a polarized era, the bill is impressive­ly bipartisan. Five conservati­ves and four liberals cosponsore­d the legislatio­n in the Senate, including names you would never expect to be on the same side—like Jeff Flake and Cory Booker. It has significan­t “cross-cut appeal,” Gardner says. He hopes the bill will gain momentum after the midterm elections.

But for Republican­s, the effort to ensure states’ rights when it comes to marijuana policy is more important than a bipartisan collaborat­ion. “It’s a federalism experiment,” Gardner says. “Republican­s who have long been champions of states’

“GOOD PEOPLE don’t smoke marijuana.” — JEFF SESSIONS

rights can choose this as a moment to prove it.”

What he means is that conservati­ves can finally showcase the success of small government. Libertaria­ns, Republican­s and right-wing traditiona­lists hope the bottom-up nature of marijuana policy changes will pave the road for states to stand up on other issues. For conservati­ve lawmakers not persuaded by the states’ rights argument, there’s always the reminder that legalizing the drug comes with the benefit of being able to place a tax on it. Colorado has already cashed in over $130 million in marijuana tax revenue during the first six months of 2018— most of it spent on improving the state’s schools.

Gardner says chances like this don’t present themselves very often. Even still, there are lawmakers in states like Missouri who continue to oppose bills with the word marijuana attached. Gardner remembers one senator saying to him, “Well, Cory, you might have potheads in your state, but I’ve got Baptists.” Officials like that should look at the polls and “really get to know your voters,” Gardner says.

How the Republican Party Will ‘Survive and Thrive’

the speedy growth of support for marijuana legalizati­on among Republican­s in the past few years—and particular­ly in the past few months— comes as the GOP gears up for a highly contested midterm election cycle.

The Democratic Party hopes November will help them regain some power in Washington and primary elections have shown promising results. To maintain their control, Republican­s are willing to take all the help they can get. Boehner says he’s “watching candidates take positions you would not have seen two years ago, four years ago, certainly not 10 years ago.”

“It’s politicall­y advantageo­us right now to be a Republican supporting marijuana,” says David Flaherty, a former Republican National Committee member and current Colorado political strategist.

The expanding public support for legal weed is its own type of lobbyist, exerting much of the same pressure on politician­s. But the cannabis industry is no Big Pharma, spending hundreds of millions of dollars on lobbying efforts. It’s not anywhere near as influentia­l as the tobacco industry or on the same political playing field as the oil industry.

But experts say it could be one day. The emerging industry cashed in around $9 billion in sales last year. With the addition of recreation­al markets in

We’re looking at letting states decide legalizati­on. I will probably end up SUPPORTING that, yes. — DONALD TRUMP

California and other states, the sector could make as much as $11 billion in 2018 and $21 billion in 2021. As states like Michigan, Maryland and Rhode Island all strongly consider legislatio­n—with some Republican support—to establish regulated adult-use markets, lawmakers want to get in on the ground floor.

Already, politician­s are beginning to see the benefits of supporting the cannabis industry through campaign fundraisin­g. Rohrabache­r, who is facing his toughest re-election campaign in three decades and is seen as one of the most vulnerable Republican­s in the House, has been rewarded for his pro-weed stance. The congressma­n has gained $5,000 checks from companies and organizati­ons including Weedmaps, Scotts Miracle-gro and the National Cannabis Industry Associatio­n. Since 2016, Rohrabache­r has received more than $80,000 in marijuana industry money.

In the long run, Republican lawmakers may support marijuana decriminal­ization for the simple fact that it may help them get elected as they play a catchup game with young, nonwhite voters. An estimated 24 million people ages 18 to 29 cast votes in the 2016 election. In that demographi­c, Donald Trump lost to Hillary Clinton by an 18-point margin. Millennial­s are about to inherit the kingdom as the largest voting block in the country, and, according to one poll, over 80 percent believe the drug is safer than alcohol.

Weld says the decriminal­ization of marijuana is also a “direct appeal to communitie­s of color,” as black Americans are almost four times more likely to be arrested for weed-related offenses than their white counterpar­ts. Think of cannabis as a political olive branch extended to diverse voters in an attempt to soften what many consider to be an unwelcomin­g party image. “If you want the Republican Party to survive and thrive over the next 50 years, we have to do things that appeal to other population­s that aren’t older, white and male,” says GOP strategist Brendan Steinhause­r.

With Texas, as well as some of the nation’s deepest-red states, like Utah and Oklahoma, moving forward with marijuana policy changes, all Republican­s will have to pick a side on legalizati­on, as well as affirming states’ right to choose what works for them. “This is not something that is going to stop at the edges of Colorado or California,” Gardner warns. “This is going to march across the country. It’s an opportunit­y for Republican­s to practice what they preach.”

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 ??  ?? THIS BUD’S FOR YOU A member of a 1969 Be-in at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. Phillip and Kevin Goldberg of Green Leaf Medical toxr the ʀozer room of their Maryland facility, Zhich grozs 1 strains of medical marijuana.
THIS BUD’S FOR YOU A member of a 1969 Be-in at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. Phillip and Kevin Goldberg of Green Leaf Medical toxr the ʀozer room of their Maryland facility, Zhich grozs 1 strains of medical marijuana.
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 ??  ?? DEEP IN THE WEEDS Below: A medical grade marijuana display at a MMJ Dispensary in Denver. As of February, Colorado has the largest number of dispensari­es in any state: 505 medical facilities and 520 recreation­al.
DEEP IN THE WEEDS Below: A medical grade marijuana display at a MMJ Dispensary in Denver. As of February, Colorado has the largest number of dispensari­es in any state: 505 medical facilities and 520 recreation­al.
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 ??  ?? SMOKE SIGNALS Above: Steps to a joint. Left: A woman at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. Medical marijuana is supported by 94 percent of Americans; two in every three adults say cannabis should be legalized for recreation­al adult use.
SMOKE SIGNALS Above: Steps to a joint. Left: A woman at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. Medical marijuana is supported by 94 percent of Americans; two in every three adults say cannabis should be legalized for recreation­al adult use.
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 ??  ?? MONEY CHANGES EVERYTHING A sales associate at Good Meds, a medical cannabis center in Lakewood, Colorado. Sales reached $9 billion in the U.S. in 2017, and could climb to $21 billion in 2021 with the addition of recreation­al markets in California and other states.
MONEY CHANGES EVERYTHING A sales associate at Good Meds, a medical cannabis center in Lakewood, Colorado. Sales reached $9 billion in the U.S. in 2017, and could climb to $21 billion in 2021 with the addition of recreation­al markets in California and other states.
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