A Tale of Two Bills (Part 2 – Up in Smoke) – Update for April 12, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

… MARIJUANA REFORM IS SUFFERING FROM TOO MUCH INTEREST

Politico was just one of several news outlets last week admitting that the MORE Act – far-reaching marijuana legalization bill passed two weeks ago by the House – still has “no real path to President Joe Biden’s desk.”

MORE’s passage marks the second time in less than two years that the House passed legislation to decriminalize pot, but the Democrats have “passed a party-line bill that has little chance of getting the necessary Republican support to pass the Senate.”

senatemarijuana220412“You’re not going to be able to get Republicans on board… the way that the MORE Act is done,” said Rep Nancy Mace (R-SC), who introduced a bill last year that decriminalizes marijuana and expunges some records but does not create federal grant programs. “You’ve got to have Republicans on board if we’re going to have any chance of getting it done in the Senate.”

Ironically, Republican complaints about MORE relate to federal funding of pot programs. No one is critical of the expungement and retroactive sentencing reforms.

The Senate — where Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), are working on the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act — is even tougher ground for weed.

Booker and Schumer have refused to even hold a hearing on a cannabis banking bill the House has approved six times because it does not address criminal justice reform. But Democrats’ pursuit of a perfect comprehensive pot bill worries some lawmakers and advocates, who do not see a clear path forward for sweeping drug policy changes under Republican leadership in either chamber — especially the Senate. Given that Democrats may not control both houses of Congress next year, the window for federal cannabis policy port reform may not be open much longer.

MORE faces significant hurdles in the Senate. First, not all Democrats are in favor of marijuana legalization; conservative Democrats, represented by a few senators such as Sen Joseph Manchin (WV), stand in the way of reform. In order to pass the Senate, the bill needs to secure 60 votes to be safe from a Republican filibuster. Because not all Democrats are expected to vote in favor of the MORE Act, ensuring its success would require more than 10 Republicans voting in favor of it.

marijuana220412But the future of marijuana legalization does not rely solely on the success of the MORE Act. Schumer intends to introduce  CAOA later this month. If CAOA gets a vote in the Senate, it will be the first time in 50 years that the Senate voted on cannabis reform. The downside, according to the National Law Review, is that “the competing interests of these two bills could create an unnecessary deadlock, potentially leaving the cannabis industry with another year of failed reforms.”

MORE Act (H.R. 3617)

Politico, House passes marijuana legalization bill (again), but with no clear path forward (April 1, 2022)

Shepherd’s, Marijuana Legalization Act Passes the House, Likely to Die in the Senate (April 7, 2022)

National Law Review, The House Does It Again: MORE Act Ready for Senate Action (April 4, 2022)

Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act (not yet introduced)

– Thomas L. Root

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