USA TODAY International Edition

Trump tells senator he’ll leave state-legal pot programs alone

Sessions’ hostility had many in industry on edge

- Trevor Hughes

America’s fast-growing marijuana industry could be poised for supercharg­ed expansion after President Trump promised to respect state-legalized pot in a deal with a Colorado senator who had been blocking presidenti­al nominees.

Republican Sen. Cory Gardner on Friday announced he’d received assurances from the president that federal agents would leave alone states like Colorado that have legalized recreation­al cannabis. Gardner had been blocking nominees to the Department of Justice over the issue since January but relented Friday.

“President Trump has assured me that he will support a federalism-based legislativ­e solution to fix this states’ rights issue once and for all,” he said in a statement.

Gardner didn’t elaborate on what specific legislatio­n Trump said he would support, although Congress is currently considerin­g several bills that would legalize cannabis at the national level.

The country’s rapidly growing marijuana industry has struggled with fears Trump’s administra­tion would alter the Obama-era policy of letting legalized pot flourish in states where voters approved it. Many traditiona­l investors have shied away from pouring their capital into the industry over fears they’d be treated like drug trafficker­s, and a strong sign of support from Trump for congressio­nal action might provide the reassuranc­e they’re seeking.

Mason Tvert, a longtime marijuana activist who helped lead Colorado’s legalizati­on efforts, welcomed the news.

“It has been a long and difficult process, but we may now be seeing the light at the end of the tunnel,” he said. “This is one more step toward ending the irrational policy of marijuana prohibitio­n, not only in Colorado but throughout the country.”

Attorney General Jeff Sessions is widely considered hostile to cannabis, and in January he rescinded an Obamaera memo assuring state-regulated marijuana dealers that federal prosecutor­s would leave them alone if they followed state regulation­s intended to keep pot out of the hands of kids and money out of the hands of drug cartels.

Nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreation­al pot, although not all of them regulate and permit retail sales. Today, more than 60% of Americans believe recreation­al marijuana should be legal, double its popularity in 2000, according to a January poll by the Pew Research Center.

Medical pot access enjoys even stronger popularity, numerous studies have found. Thirty states and the District of Columbia have legalized some form of medical cannabis, which already enjoys special protection from Congress.

A federal crackdown on cannabis risks tens of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in taxes that are already funding school constructi­on, homelessne­ss services and college scholarshi­ps.

Sessions’ rescission of the memo to give prosecutor­s more discretion was widely interprete­d as a hostile move. But because Trump said during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign that he would respect states’ rights to legalize marijuana, the cannabis industry has grown increasing­ly frustrated with the mixed messages.

Marijuana advocates are pushing Congress to drop pot as a Schedule 1 controlled substance, which could give the industry broader acceptance, potentiall­y opening up access to bank accounts, traditiona­l investing and even the ability to ship products across state lines.

Many leading marijuana industry executives say they’d stopped worrying that Trump and Sessions were truly targeting their businesses.

“If Jeff Sessions wanted to shut the industry down, he could have shut the industry down,” said Leslie Bocskor, the founder of Electrum Partners, a cannabis investment and advisory firm. “He doesn’t want to kill it. In my opinion he’s trying to say to Congress, ‘Are you paying attention to the will of the American people?’ Ultimately, these people are political animals. If somebody who could kill it was going to kill it, it would be dead already. And they haven’t.”

 ??  ?? Marijuana plants mature inside a growing room at the Medicine Man cannabis dispensary in Denver. TREVOR HUGHES/ USA TODAY
Marijuana plants mature inside a growing room at the Medicine Man cannabis dispensary in Denver. TREVOR HUGHES/ USA TODAY

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