The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Trump should back off states with legal pot

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President Donald Trump said he “probably will end up supporting” a plan to keep the federal government out of state-run marijuana markets, which is good news for Washington state. But he should take it a step further. Washington and other states with legal marijuana laws need clarity from the federal government.

In a break from his attorney general, Trump now appears ready to provide it. The president said he “probably will end up supporting” a bill in Congress to keep the federal government from interferin­g in states with legal pot laws.

The developmen­t is promising. But what really matters is whether Trump follows through. The president must not leave legal marijuana states yoyoing between his vague words of support and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ marijuana-averse statements and policies.

Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Cory Gardner, R-Colo., are co-sponsoring the new legislatio­n, which would prevent the Department of Justice from prosecutin­g state-licensed marijuana businesses and their customers.

The bill’s passage would be good news for Washington state, which is home to about 2,000 licensed marijuana businesses, including about 550 retail stores. The growing legal pot industry brings more than $350 million in tax money to the state’s coffers each year.

Eight other states have also legalized marijuana for recreation­al use, while an additional 20 have approved the use of medical marijuana.

People in these states have sent a clear message that they want to move away from a failed era of marijuana prohibitio­n, which has diverted lawenforce­ment resources from other pressing issues while causing the disproport­ionate arrests of African-Americans. The dubious legacy of the war on drugs is not one these states want to continue.

With that in mind, Trump’s instinct to override Sessions’ outdated opposition to legalized marijuana is a good one. At a minimum, Trump should use his presidenti­al influence to help push the Gardner-Warren bill through Congress.

Ideally, though, Congress should go even further by ending marijuana’s prohibitio­n nationwide. Time has made it clear that marijuana does not belong on the list of banned Schedule I drugs, which includes heroin and other highly addictive substances with no accepted medical use. More than 60 percent of Americans now support legalizing cannabis. Rescheduli­ng marijuana would also make it easier to research the drug’s medical uses and benefits, important work that has been stymied.

Trump should also lend his support to the broader legalizati­on effort.

Law-enforcemen­t resources would be much better spent combating the opioid epidemic than continuing a losing battle against pot.

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