The
Senate’s top Democrat announced Friday that he is introducing
legislation to decriminalize marijuana, the first time that a leader of
either party in Congress has endorsed a rollback of one of the country’s
oldest drug laws.
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) in a statement called the move “simply the right thing to do.”
“The
time has come to decriminalize marijuana,” Schumer said. “My thinking —
as well as the general population’s views — on the issue has evolved,
and so I believe there’s no better time than the present to get this
done. It’s simply the right thing to do.”
Schumer first shared his intentions Thursday in an interview with
Vice News Tonight on HBO, in which he decried the negative effects of current marijuana laws, under which the drug has the same
legal classification as
heroin. He said too many people caught with small amounts of marijuana
had spent too much time in jail and that current laws have had a
disproportionate effect on minority communities.
Marijuana
legalization, which spent years as a fringe political cause, has become
increasingly popular with all voters and increasingly embraced by
Democrats. In January, the Pew Research Center
found 61 percent of Americans supportive of legalization, with support reaching 70 percent among millennials.
Last
year, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), who is seen by many Democrats as a
potential presidential candidate in 2020, introduced the Marijuana
Justice Act, which would legalize the drug nationwide; it was later
endorsed by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), whose state legalized marijuana in
2015, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), who is also seen as a
potential presidential contender. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who
endorsed a marijuana-legalization initiative in California during his
2016 presidential campaign, endorsed Booker’s bill Thursday morning.
Schumer
is introducing separate legislation on Friday — a date that is an
unofficial holiday for marijuana users. His bill would not legalize
marijuana outright, but instead allow states to decide whether to make
the drug available commercially. It would end the limbo that marijuana
sellers find themselves in, months after Attorney General Jeff Sessions
rescinded Obama-era guidance that prevented federal law enforcement
officials from interfering with the marijuana business in states where
it had legal status.
“The
bill lets the states decide and be the laboratories that they ought to
be,” Schumer said. “It also will ensure that minority- and woman-owned
businesses have a dedicated funding stream to help them compete against
bigger companies in the marijuana business. Critically, we ensure that
advertising can’t be aimed at kids, and put real funds behind research
into the health effects of THC,” referring to the primary psychoactive
substance in marijuana.
The
legislation would also maintain federal authority to regulate marijuana
advertising in the same way it does alcohol and tobacco advertising. The
aim, Schumer said, is to ensure that marijuana businesses aren’t
allowed to target children in their advertisements.
Schumer’s
move was quickly celebrated by legalization supporters, who began the
week by thanking Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for
fast-tracking a bill that would legalize industrial hemp.
“In
the past week or so we’ve seen an unprecedented escalation of political
support for marijuana law reform,” said Tom Angell, chairman of
Marijuana Majority. “It seems as if both parties may have finally
realized just how popular marijuana legalization is with voters and are
afraid of the other party stealing the issue.”
Democrats
see the Schumer bill as part of an ongoing effort to attract young
voters, who tend not to participate in midterm elections. Schumer has
also gotten
behind a campaign
to restore “net neutrality,” regulation that would prevent Internet
service providers from skewing the prices or download speeds for certain
kinds of data.
“The time for decriminalization has come, and I hope we can move the ball forward on this,” Schumer said.
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