Delegation senses “urgency”
Lawmakers aim to push pot-centric bills after AG Sessions’ announcement.
Members of Colorado’s congressional delegation on Friday began to hatch a plan to counter Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ move to eliminate Obama-era guidance on marijuana enforcement.
Legislative sources confirmed to The Cannabist that Colorado lawmakers, including Reps. Ed Perlmutter, D-Arvada, Diana DeGette, D-Denver, and Jared Polis, D-Boulder, and Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, held a call Friday afternoon to strategize on a push on marijuana-related measures — specifically crafting a spending bill provision to restrict the Justice Department from interfering with laws in Colorado and the 45 other states that have legalized cannabis in some form.
Perlmutter confirmed in an interview that he participated in the call and said, “There’s now urgency to start moving” on the slew of marijuana-centric bills that have been introduced in Congress but have thus far languished in committee.
“I think the Sessions memo yesterday lit a fire under a lot of people about these bills,” he said.
The clock is ticking on an immediate fix: hitching marijuana protection measures to upcoming spending legislation being hashed out to avoid a government shutdown on Jan. 19.
“(Delegation members are trying) to work together to come up with something that can be heard promptly and try to reverse what Sessions did yesterday,” Perlmutter said.
The language of such a measure has yet to be developed — the Colorado lawmakers plan to reconvene on the issue next week, Perlmutter said.
Initial indications are that it could resemble the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment.
That provision included in omnibus legislation since 2014 prohibits Justice Department spending to interfere with state laws authorizing medical marijuana use, distribution, possession and cultivation. This new provision likely would extend to state laws authorizing recreational use, sources said.
Polis previously proposed an amendment that would provide similar protections for state-legal recreational marijuana.
When reached late Friday, he said he’d been in contact with other members of the Colorado delegation, Republican and Democrat, who he said were “alarmed” by Sessions’ decision.
“For the past three years, I have tried to move forward an amendment to make sure that the Department of Justice cannot use resources to crack down on
legalized recreational and medical marijuana,” Polis said in an emailed statement. “I am pleased that the idea behind my amendment is finally gaining bipartisan traction. I welcome it, and am hopeful that we can attach language to the government funding bill to protect legalized recreational and medical marijuana.”
The Colorado delegates also discussed a fuller fledged strategy of drumming up support for existing cannabis-related legislation, Perlmutter said. That could include cobbling bills into a standalone package.
“I think any one of the bills … if they were passed on their own, would certainly help the situation,” Perlmutter said. “Maybe we put them all together, attach them to a funding bill. We’ve got a funding bill very quickly. … We’ll see if that’s a possibility.”
At the very least, Perlmutter said that members of Congress supportive of marijuana measures should “make so much noise and be so persistent that we start getting some doors open that have been closed until now.”
Whether Sessions’ actions Thursday spur legislative movement in Congress for cannabis issues remains to be seen, said Mark Kleiman, a professor of public policy at the New York University Marron Institute of Urban Management.
If anything, he said, Sessions’ move could bolster the millennial vote in upcoming elections, potentially creating a situation where some form of federal marijuana legalization could emerge as early as 2019.