The Denver Post

Democrats favor looser restrictio­ns on marijuana

Growing GOP contingent is joining them

- By Sean Sullivan and Seung Min Kim

Democrats are increasing­ly embracing looser restrictio­ns on marijuana — and a growing number of high-profile Republican­s are joining them, marking a shift in the politics of cannabis.

As Democrats try to regain control of Congress in the November elections and make gains in state races, some party strategist­s are wagering that being firmly on the side of easing marijuana laws will help boost turnout among millennial­s, a key bloc in the Democratic coalition. Many of those voters have sat out recent midterm contests.

While pot enthusiast­s celebrated their unofficial “4/20” holiday on Friday, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., announced his support for decriminal­izing marijuana at the federal level. Echoing others who have revised their positions, Schumer said his thinking had “evolved.”

Democrats are not alone in moving toward greater acceptance of a drug once broadly seen as taboo. Schumer’s new stance came a week after a top Republican senator announced an agreement with President Donald Trump to keep his state’s legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana protected from federal interferen­ce.

Former House Speaker John Boehner, R-ohio, recently joined the board of advisers for a company that cultivates and dispenses cannabis. Boehner was previously an opponent of decriminal­izing marijuana.

The developmen­ts mirror a change in public opinion as well as an uptick in the number of states that have legalized some form of marijuana use. Republican­s, who have long advocated protecting states’ rights, increasing­ly have moved to shield them from federal interventi­on.

As they gear up for the fall campaign, both parties are trying to energize their political bases to turn out at the polls. For Democrats, who have embraced the most liberal platform in decades, marijuana reform is another issue they hope will enliven their core voters.

“This motivates young people because it’s a question of freedom of justice,” said Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii, part of a younger, more liberal generation of Democratic lawmakers.

Schumer’s decision was informed in part by this belief, according to a Democrat familiar with his thinking.

“We see getting millennial­s to the polls in the midterms as a potential huge boon for us. And we need to give them something to affirmativ­ely pull the lever for a Democrat in the midterms,” said this Democrat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe strategy.

In a written statement announcing his decision, Schumer said “there’s no better time than the present” to decriminal­ize marijuana. He said the legislatio­n he plans to release would remove it from the list of scheduled substances under the Controlled Substances Act.

There were no immediate signs that Schumer’s legislatio­n would gain major traction in the Senate, where Republican­s have a narrow majority. A spokesman for Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said he would not make a prediction regarding a bill that hadn’t been released.

In the House, which Republican­s control by a wider margin and has been more conservati­ve than the Senate, there could be even less interest.

“Count me as still skeptical,” said Rep. Tom Cole, Rokla., who voiced concerns about the negative impact of marijuana use on the health of Americans. Still, Cole said there is “no question opinion has shifted on this.” And he said it could impact the makeup of the electorate.

The percentage of Americans who support legalizing marijuana is nearly double what it was in 2000, according to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in the fall.

The poll showed a partisan divide, with most Democrats favoring legalizati­on and a majority of Republican­s opposed. But younger Republican­s saw legalizati­on as much more favorable than older Republican­s.

Recreation­al marijuana is legal for adults in nine states and the District of Columbia. One of those states is Colorado, where Republican Sen. Cory Gardner secured a major concession from the Trump administra­tion last week.

The White House said Trump will get behind legislativ­e efforts to protect states that have legalized marijuana, even though that collides with the approach favored by Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

“I’ve said from the very beginning that the two were in a different position on this,” Gardner said this week, referring to Trump and Sessions. “I think we’ve now seen that the president was, all along, hoping to follow a states’ rights approach to this.”

The Colorado senator, who leads the Senate GOP campaign arm, had been blocking Justice Department nominees in retaliatio­n over Sessions’s decision in January to rescind Obama-era guidance that discourage­d prosecutor­s from enforcing federal marijuana laws in states that allow use of the substance.

Gardner and a handful of other senators are working on legislatio­n that would ensure the federal government couldn’t interfere with states that have legalized the substance.

Legalizing marijuana in some states has given rise to lucrative industries. This has pressured members of both parties with more traditiona­l views on the drug to consider the impact on the local economy.

“It really has become a real business that employs real people and entreprene­urs,” said Rep. Jared Polis, D-colo., who helped start the bipartisan Cannabis Caucus and is running for governor.

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