Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Cannabis
Related: About this forumJeff Sessions Isn't Giving up on Weed. He's Doubling Down.
Source: Politico
Jeff Sessions Isnt Giving up on Weed. Hes Doubling Down.
Congressional dysfunction may do what the pot-hating attorney general hasnt managed to do all year: Remove protections for the booming legal weed industry.
By JAMES HIGDON December 16, 2017
A year ago, when president-elect Donald Trump announced Senator Jeff Sessions would be his attorney general, advocates for marijuana law reform were suddenly seized with panic. The longtime Alabama senator, they knew, had once joked that he considered the Klan to be OK guys until he found out they smoked pot. Only they werent quite sure he was kidding.
-snip-
I wont commit to never enforcing federal law, Senator Leahy, Sessions replied, suppressing a slight smirk. That double negative tightened the knot in every drug policy reformers gut. Exactly how vulnerable were the nascent marijuana industries in the 29 states where it was now legal? Would Sessions, who rarely misses an opportunity to bemoan the scourge of marijuana, sweep aside the paper-thin order imposed by the Obama administration that had stayed the enforcement hand of the Department of Justice? Would SWAT teams arrest wheelchair-bound medical marijuana patients, raid marijuana dispensaries and shut down the high-tech growhouses that supplied them?
The dreaded crackdown never materialized. Sessions, perhaps preoccupied with other priorities like keeping his volatile boss from firing him, remained largely inactive on the subject. Meanwhile, a series of incremental advancements on the pro-marijuana front helped to further enmesh the $9.7 billion industry into the commercial fabric of the nation, 60 percent of whose residents support some form of legal pot. California opened the doors to recreational marijuana and issued regulations for outdoor marijuana festivals; Florida began its implementation of a medical marijuana program; and Denver and Las Vegas are vying to become the first city in America to legalize marijuana consumption lounges (think high-end bars with expensive weed choices instead of booze). Sessions, for his part, has spent his time in testy exchanges with DOJ interns and convening meetings with small groups of like-minded anti-pot activists determined to roll back state-level momentum. I do believe that the public is not properly educated on some of the issues related to marijuana, he told one such group on Friday.
But things are suddenly looking rosier for Sessions. Thanks to Congress fumbling over the spending bill, the AGs yearning to battle legal marijuana may get a major boost without him having to lift a finger. Thats because Rohrabacher-Farr, a little-known and even less discussed amendment that protects state-legal medical marijuana programs from federal interference, is close to expiring. If the government shuts down at the expiration of the current continuous resolution on December 22, or if negotiations in an upcoming appropriations conference committee fail to insert it in the final draft of the spending billentirely possible given House Republicans hostility to marijuanaSessions would be free to unleash federal drug agents on a drug, which according to federal drug law, is considered the equal of heroin and LSD.
-snip-
Congressional dysfunction may do what the pot-hating attorney general hasnt managed to do all year: Remove protections for the booming legal weed industry.
By JAMES HIGDON December 16, 2017
A year ago, when president-elect Donald Trump announced Senator Jeff Sessions would be his attorney general, advocates for marijuana law reform were suddenly seized with panic. The longtime Alabama senator, they knew, had once joked that he considered the Klan to be OK guys until he found out they smoked pot. Only they werent quite sure he was kidding.
-snip-
I wont commit to never enforcing federal law, Senator Leahy, Sessions replied, suppressing a slight smirk. That double negative tightened the knot in every drug policy reformers gut. Exactly how vulnerable were the nascent marijuana industries in the 29 states where it was now legal? Would Sessions, who rarely misses an opportunity to bemoan the scourge of marijuana, sweep aside the paper-thin order imposed by the Obama administration that had stayed the enforcement hand of the Department of Justice? Would SWAT teams arrest wheelchair-bound medical marijuana patients, raid marijuana dispensaries and shut down the high-tech growhouses that supplied them?
The dreaded crackdown never materialized. Sessions, perhaps preoccupied with other priorities like keeping his volatile boss from firing him, remained largely inactive on the subject. Meanwhile, a series of incremental advancements on the pro-marijuana front helped to further enmesh the $9.7 billion industry into the commercial fabric of the nation, 60 percent of whose residents support some form of legal pot. California opened the doors to recreational marijuana and issued regulations for outdoor marijuana festivals; Florida began its implementation of a medical marijuana program; and Denver and Las Vegas are vying to become the first city in America to legalize marijuana consumption lounges (think high-end bars with expensive weed choices instead of booze). Sessions, for his part, has spent his time in testy exchanges with DOJ interns and convening meetings with small groups of like-minded anti-pot activists determined to roll back state-level momentum. I do believe that the public is not properly educated on some of the issues related to marijuana, he told one such group on Friday.
But things are suddenly looking rosier for Sessions. Thanks to Congress fumbling over the spending bill, the AGs yearning to battle legal marijuana may get a major boost without him having to lift a finger. Thats because Rohrabacher-Farr, a little-known and even less discussed amendment that protects state-legal medical marijuana programs from federal interference, is close to expiring. If the government shuts down at the expiration of the current continuous resolution on December 22, or if negotiations in an upcoming appropriations conference committee fail to insert it in the final draft of the spending billentirely possible given House Republicans hostility to marijuanaSessions would be free to unleash federal drug agents on a drug, which according to federal drug law, is considered the equal of heroin and LSD.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/12/16/jeff-sessions-marijuana-216109
InfoView thread info, including edit history
TrashPut this thread in your Trash Can (My DU » Trash Can)
BookmarkAdd this thread to your Bookmarks (My DU » Bookmarks)
2 replies, 1203 views
ShareGet links to this post and/or share on social media
AlertAlert this post for a rule violation
PowersThere are no powers you can use on this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
ReplyReply to this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
Rec (2)
ReplyReply to this post
2 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Jeff Sessions Isn't Giving up on Weed. He's Doubling Down. (Original Post)
Eugene
Dec 2017
OP
Response to Eugene (Original post)
carterbob251 This message was self-deleted by its author.
yuiyoshida
(42,718 posts)2. Hopefully he will be gone soon
The FBI has its eyes on him, in the Russia Collusion case, if he goes down, we Weed smokers can take a breath of relief!