Senator says Trump pledged legal pot business won't be affected by DOJ stance

According to a Colorado senator, Trump vowed to soften Jeff Sessions' hard line against marijuana, but some pot proponents are wary.

by Dennis Romero /
President Donald Trump speaks before having lunch with Republican senators in the Cabinet Room of the White House on June 13, 2017 in Washington. From left are, the president, Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark. and Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo.Susan Walsh / AP File

Marijuana enthusiasts were even more at more ease than usual this weekend after a U.S. senator from Colorado said President Donald Trump has committed that his administration's stated harder policies against cannabis would not affect the state's legal pot business.

Sen. Cory Gardner, a Republican, also said in a statement Friday that "President Trump has assured me that he will support a federalism-based legislative solution to fix this states’ rights issue once and for all."

Attorney General Jess Sessions, who famously said in 2016 that "good people don’t use marijuana," in January rescinded an Obama-administration policy that largely shielded legalized marijuana from federal intervention — raising fears among advocates and marijuana businesses in states that legalized the substance.

"It is a pleasant surprise that he is taking action to reign [sic] in Jeff Sessions," said Adam Eidinger, co-founder of the Washington, D.C. decriminalization group DCMJ, said in an email this week.

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The Cole memo that Sessions rescinded in January had directed Department of Justice prosecutors to deprioritize crackdowns on large-scale marijuana business operators in states where they've been sanctioned. Gardner reacted by blocking nominees for DOJ positions, he said.

Gardner said Friday that he's agreed to step out of the way of the rest of the nominees as part of his negotiation with Trump.

"Since the campaign, President Trump has consistently supported states' rights to decide for themselves how best to approach marijuana," Gardner said. "Late Wednesday, I received a commitment from the President that the Department of Justice’s rescission of the Cole memo will not impact Colorado's legal marijuana industry."

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Sessions has a long history of opposition to the use of marijuana. Despite laws passed in states that legalize recreational use of marijuana, it remains illegal under federal law.

Colorado legalized medical marijuana use in 2010, voters approved recreational use of marijuana in 2012 and the first recreational sales began in 2014. The state says it collected more than $247 million in taxes and fees on retail and medical marijuana last year.

Eight states — Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon and Washington — have approved laws allowing the sale of recreational marijuana, although recreational sales have not yet begun in all of those states.

 U.S. Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO) speaks at a town hall meeting in Lakewood, Colorado on Aug. 15, 2017. Rick Wilking / Reuters file

Vermont's governor in late January signed a bill into law that would authorize the recreational use of marijuana in the state, but it does not contain a mechanism for the taxation or sale of marijuana, the Associated Press reported. The legislature is expected to develop a system.

The president's reported move comes as a number of Republicans have opened their hearts to the Schedule I substance.

Earlier this week former house speaker John A. Boehner said he is joining an advisory board for a cannabis company, Acreage Holdings. Boehner, of Ohio, said in a tweet that "my thinking on cannabis has evolved."

Last month Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, expressed support for legalized hemp, which is a cousin of marijuana that contains a negligible amount of THC, the psychoactive compound that gets pot users high, but cultivation of which is banned under federal law.

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The polling organization Gallup said in October that in 2017 for the first time a majority of Republicans — 51 percent — have expressed support for legalizing marijuana. Since 2014 U.S. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-California, has been the co-sponsor of annual legislation that protects state-legal medical marijuana concerns from federal crackdowns.

"That this comes during [the] same week that GOP insiders John Boehner and Mitch McConnell also endorsed far-reaching cannabis reforms shows just how far the politics of marijuana have shifted," Tom Angell, chair of the pro-pot group Marijuana Majority, said in an email.

Legalization proponents are still wary. Trump has been known to change his mind, and Sessions is a longtime proponent of the nearly half-century long war on drugs. "It remains to be seen if the president will keep his word," Angell said.

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Mike Liszewski, a policy adviser for the Drug Policy Alliance, said that until the ink dries on the signatures on Gardner's states' rights bill, Sessions still poses a risk to legal marijuana users and businesses.

"Trump's pledge to Gardner is a significant and potentially game-changing development," he said, "but it does not necessarily mean that Sessions it no longer a threat to licensed cannabis businesses."

"The legislation must be drafted sufficiently so it does not permit Sessions to crackdown on businesses and individuals obeying state law, and then Trump must follow through on his pledge to sign the bill if it reaches his desk," Liszewski said. "Until then, Sessions remains a threat, albeit an increasingly weaker one."

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