Chuck Schumer's Doomed Marijuana Monstrosity Is Not a Serious Attempt To Repeal Pot Prohibition
The Senate majority leader's 296-page bill would compound the barriers to successful legalization.

The first thing we should say about Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's marijuana legalization bill, which the New York Democrat finally filed today, more than a year after sharing a discussion draft, is that it will not pass. With the Senate evenly divided, Schumer needs Republican support to overcome a filibuster, which he has done little to attract. He can't even count on unanimous support from his fellow Democrats, at least a few of whom are apt to be leery of his specific approach, if not altogether opposed to repealing the federal ban on marijuana.
What is Schumer's approach? Last July, I criticized his 163-page discussion draft as excessively complicated, burdensome, and prescriptive. I said it was "larded with new taxes, regulations, and spending programs that seem designed to alienate Republicans who might be inclined to support a cleaner bill on federalist grounds." The same is true of the new, supposedly improved version, but more so.
Schumer's Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act, which is cosponsored by Sens. Cory Booker (D–N.J.) and Ron Wyden (D–Ore.), now weighs in at 296 pages, nearly twice as long as the initial version. Whatever this is, it is not a serious attempt to build a bipartisan coalition in favor of eliminating the untenable conflict between federal marijuana prohibition and the laws of the 37 states that allow medical or recreational use of cannabis.
Start with taxes, which have been a formidable barrier to the displacement of the black market in states that set them too high. Those levies are one of the main reasons why unlicensed dealers in states like California still account for most marijuana sales. Given a decade of experience with that problem, the most prudent federal tax on cannabis products would be zero. Yet Schumer's first draft called for a federal excise tax starting at 10 percent and rising to 25 percent by the fifth year, which would be in addition to frequently hefty state and local taxes. After a year of consultation and consideration, Schumer has retained that provision, although the rates would be half as high for manufacturers with proceeds below specified levels.*
Regulation is another factor that has made it difficult for state-licensed marijuana suppliers to compete with black-market dealers. The Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act devotes 71 pages to new federal regulations of marijuana businesses that are already regulated by state and local governments, on top of the 52 pages dealing with taxation. In addition to giving the Treasury Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives authority over the cannabis industry, the bill would establish a Center for Cannabis Products within the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA would be charged with registering marijuana businesses, setting product standards, establishing labeling requirements, policing "adulterated" and "misbranded" products, regulating advertising and promotion, and imposing "restrictions on sale and distribution."
In addition to mandating specific rules, such as a nationwide minimum purchase age of 21 and a ban on added flavors in cannabis vaping products, Schumer's bill would give the FDA carte blanche to impose any regulations it deems appropriate. It says the FDA may "impose other restrictions on the sale and distribution of cannabis products, including restrictions on the access to, and the advertising and promotion of, the cannabis product," if it "determines that such regulation would be appropriate for the protection of the public health."
Given the FDA's dubious sense of what protecting public health means in other areas, such as regulation of tobacco and nicotine vaping products, that is a pretty scary clause. As in those contexts, whatever arbitrary rules the agency comes up with are bound to restrict consumer choice and help perpetuate the black market.
The new version of Schumer's bill also retains "social equity" spending programs that are apt to turn off Republicans. The Community Reinvestment Grant Program would "provide eligible entities with funds to administer services for individuals adversely impacted by the War on Drugs," including job training, reentry services, legal aid, literacy programs, "youth recreation or mentoring programs," and "health education programs." The Cannabis Restorative Opportunity Program would "provide loans and technical assistance" to "assist small business concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals." The Equitable Licensing Grant Program would provide funds to "develop and implement equitable cannabis licensing programs that minimize barriers to cannabis licensing and employment for individuals adversely impacted by the War on Drugs."
These programs resemble the ones described in the 91-page Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act, the comparatively slim bill that the House passed in April. The MORE Act managed to attract just three Republicans, two fewer than voted for an earlier version of the bill that the House approved in December 2020. One of those GOP votes was cast by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R–Fla.), the MORE Act's lone Republican cosponsor, and even he objected to the "social equity" stuff.
These programs ostensibly are aimed at ameliorating the damage done by the war on drugs. But they would be funded by taxes on cannabis consumers, who seem like the least likely group to blame for the harm caused by the federal government's 85-year war on weed. My preference would be to make the politicians who supported that morally and empirically bankrupt crusade, who until four years ago included Schumer, pay for the reparations. Short of that, the money should come out of the general fund, on the theory that the voters who kept reelecting drug warriors like Schumer and Joe Biden deserve to foot the bill for the resulting wreckage.
Better still, rather than trying to help "small business concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals" and entrepreneurs "adversely impacted by the War on Drugs" by throwing around taxpayer money, the government should get out of their way by reducing or eliminating the daunting obstacles created by licensing requirements, heavy regulation, and high taxes. Instead, Schumer has decided to toss more obstacles in their path, then use the proceeds raised by his new taxes to help some of them overcome those obstacles.
Having seen the meager and waning Republican support for the MORE Act, knowing that Democrats are apt to lose control of one or both houses of Congress this fall, and after thinking about it for more than year, Schumer seems to have concluded that a bill three times as long is the key to success. I guess that depends on how you define success. If the goal is to appease progressive Democrats, signal Schumer et al.'s virtue, and blame Republicans for the inevitable failure of his supposedly good-faith effort to end marijuana prohibition, he probably has the right recipe. But if the goal is to repeal unjust laws, make up for some of the harm they caused, and resolve the risk and uncertainty that plague the cannabis industry, a different approach might be better.
There are other options. The Common Sense Cannabis Reform Act, sponsored by Rep. Dave Joyce (R–Ohio), is one-twentieth as long as Schumer's monstrosity. The States Reform Act, which Rep. Nancy Mace (R–S.C.) unveiled last fall, is more deferential to state policy choices and imposes a much lower tax that would be locked in place for 10 years, which would facilitate the transition to a legal market. The Respect State Marijuana Laws Act of 2017, sponsored by then-Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R–Calif.), consisted of a single sentence that said the federal marijuana ban would not apply to conduct authorized by state law.
All of those bills have attracted more Republican support than the MORE Act did. Rohrabacher's bill had 46 cosponsors, including 14 Republicans. Joyce's bill has nine cosponsors, including five Republicans. Mace's bill has just four cosponsors, all of them Republicans (one of whom died last March). This is hardly a GOP stampede, but it's a start. Democrats like Schumer, by contrast, are acting like they do not care whether anyone across the aisle joins the legalization effort, even though that effort cannot succeed without cooperation from at least some Republicans.
There is some good stuff in Schumer's bill. Descheduling marijuana would be good. So would expunging the records of marijuana offenders, freeing those who are still behind bars, banning discrimination against cannabis consumers in immigration and the distribution of public benefits, and restoring their Second Amendment rights, which would be a byproduct of descheduling marijuana. Likewise for eliminating barriers to marijuana banking and scrapping IRS rules that dramatically boost the income taxes that marijuana businesses have to pay. But you have to wonder whether at least some of this could have been accomplished by legislation that had a chance of passing in the shrinking time that Democrats still have control of Congress.
Actually, you don't have to wonder. Legislation that would allow financial institutions to serve marijuana businesses without fear of criminal or regulatory penalties has been repeatedly approved by the House with broad, bipartisan support. But it has languished in the Senate, where Schumer has insisted that his own legislation take priority. The SAFE Banking Act, which would address a potentially lethal barrier that forces marijuana merchants to rely heavily on cash, making them ripe targets for robbery, would already be law but for Schumer's opposition.
I would say this is a classic example of making the perfect the enemy of the good, except that Schumer's bill, in addition to being doomed, is woefully misguided. In the name of legitimizing marijuana businesses, it hits them and their customers with new taxes and makes them subject to the whims of an agency that cannot be trusted to properly weigh costs and benefits, let alone protect the interests of consumers. In the name of replacing unauthorized dealers with licensed suppliers, it aggravates the factors that give the former an advantage over the latter.
"By failing to act," Wyden says in a press release, "the federal government is empowering the illicit cannabis market." That's exactly what this bill's taxes and regulations would do.
It may be impossible to get any sort of legalization bill, even a narrow one focused on repealing the federal marijuana ban and expunging the records of its victims, through the Senate anytime soon. Even if it passed, President Biden, given his continuing support for federal prohibition, might well veto it. But Democrats had an opportunity to pass more-modest marijuana reforms that would do some good right now, and they seem determined to squander it.
*CORRECTION: This post has been revised to note the reduced excise-tax rates for small-to-medium-sized manufacturers.
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WOW!
296 pages to say "All federal laws and regulations are hereby repealed, and all power will henceforth rest with the several states."
Or perhaps there is a bunch of taxation and regulation hiding in the "repeal"?
These fuckers never want to give up control. The bill should be one fucking sentence.
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I should be one sentence! That is brilliance and elegance all at once.
The Dems are miserable failures. I only wanted TWO THINGS from them. Protect women's rights and legalize weed. I don't want any of their other crap, none of it. With majorities and political capital they couldn't get it done and instead wasted everything on helicopter money drops, progressive boondoggles, and divisiveness. I see no reason at all to vote for Democrats. The most basic stuff they won't bother doing. We can only conclude they favor the ill found drug and all its costs since they did NOTHING to alleviate. They are no different than "build bigger prisons" firebrand Repubs.
It's sad, it will take a long time for Repubs to develop the tolerance and support to pass a Federal weed bill but I think they will beat the Dems to it. The Dems are worthless! Thanks for nothing!
Has Schumer EVER produced, or had something associated with himself, that wasn’t a crooked, loathsome pile of villainous offal?
>>There is some good stuff in Schumer's bill.
all could be completed separately but Schumer ...
I really wonder, was there a time when everything wasn't a huge omnibus? I remember we used to discuss a line-item veto, and I've always wondered what it would take to get the opposite. Some restriction on how narrow a single bill must be. I don't really have a good idea on how to enforce that though.
The problem is the federal government can't legalize or reschedule marijuana without violating a UN treaty they made promising to keep the Devil's Cabbage illegal.
Treaties do not override US law. The Supreme Court has repeatedly said so. They are aspirational at best, only implemented as far as Congress wants to go.
Cite the specific cases
the us is a sovereign nation. other nations and their laws are irrelevant. if we decide to go against a treaty who can even say shit about it. we can do what ever we damn well please.
Hrm. Shame.
What was the proposal from the Libertarian senator again?
Looters gonna loot.
Fuck off, Schumer.
-jcr
The Democrats don't want to end the war on drugs.
They talk about doing so endlessly, but they never do anything about it when it might have a chance of passing.
Schumer's bill is designed to make it look like the Democrats are trying to end the war on drugs, while guaranteeing that won't actually happen.
And yet Sullum wanted the adults back in the room. You got what you wanted asshole now you whine about it. Fuck you Jacob.
Sullum particularly, and Reason as a whole, actively participated in installing an illegitimate president and covering up authorities' misdeeds.
Are we surprised? When was the last time Schumer actually backed something that would result in real liberty.
Yeah he’s always fucked up anything good, and I’ve never seen him try to untuck anything bad.
democrats & the entire left hate liberty. none of them will ever back anything that reduces the size of government.
The Democrats don't want to end the drug war because it is necessary practice to train their violent thugs to enforce the Great Reset and the coming second American Civil War.
The apathy of the American electorate is why such clear incompetence is allowed at the highest levels of our nation.
Most punchable face? Schumer? He’s gotta be near the top of the list.
If Schumer actually got his bill passed it would be quite genius of him. I realized the bill is deliberately trying to make a byzantine bureaucracy of taxes and regulations that would enable a politically connected class to make money off a newly legalized industry. This is like how Obamacare was really a giveaway to corporate healthcare.
This won't pass but if it would Schumer should be applauded if it did for creating a new market of kickbacks. He would be legalizing graft in the cannabis industry.
The Democrat legislative MO:
Write a title to a bill that appeals to the public, and rather than doing what the title says, the bill is just "new taxes, regulations, and spending programs".
In other words, tell the public the bill is for less government, while it's really for more government, and less freedom.
more evidence, as if we really need more, that democrats hate federalism. this "bill" could be just one sentence that would remove cannabis from the schedule 1 drug list. that's all that needs to happen. everything else can happen at the state level. done. but the democrats can't pass up an opportunity to increase the size & scope of the federal government. it's always amazed my how these dumbasses in congress will put forth a bill that everyone knows has zero chance. just a total waste of time & money.
Schumer doesn't want to repeal marijuana laws. He just wants to be seen as doing something, anything, so he can go back to New York, which has legalized weed, and say, "See, I tried to do something, but those dastardly Republicans are obstructing my common sense laws." Congress is full of people like Schumer. They introduce feel good legislation with poison pills so that they'll never pass. How much work would it be to turn out a clean bill that simply removes marijuana from the lost of controlled substances? If it's not on that list, it's legal on the federal level.