California Gov. Gavin Newsom Nixes Psychedelic Decriminalization and Cannabis Cafés
Newsom vetoed both reforms, which he deemed excessively permissive.

Last weekend, California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed two important drug policy reform bills: S.B. 58, which would have decriminalized the use of four naturally occurring psychedelics, and A.B. 374, which would have authorized Amsterdam-style cannabis cafés. His main complaint: The bills were excessively permissive and did not involve enough regulation.
S.B. 58, which Sen. Scott Wiener (D–San Francisco) introduced in December 2022, passed the California Legislature last month by a 43–15 vote in the Assembly and a 21–14 vote in the Senate. The bill, which was similar to the groundbreaking ballot initiative that Colorado voters approved last November, would have eliminated criminal penalties for adults 21 or older who use psilocybin, psilocyn, mescaline, or dimethyltryptamine. In addition to possession for personal use, the bill covered noncommercial production, distribution, and transportation.
"Both peer-reviewed science and powerful personal anecdotes lead me to support new opportunities to address mental health through psychedelic medicines like those addressed in this bill," Newsom wrote in his veto message on Saturday. "Psychedelics have proven to relieve people suffering from certain conditions such as depression, PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and…addictive personality traits. This is an exciting frontier and California will be on the front-end of leading it."
But Newsom was not so excited that he was willing to endorse the proposition that people should not be arrested for using these substances. "California should immediately begin work to set up regulated treatment guidelines—replete with dosing information, therapeutic guidelines, rules to prevent against exploitation during guided treatments, and medical clearance of no underlying psychoses," he said. "Unfortunately, this bill would decriminalize possession prior to these guidelines going into place, and I cannot sign it."
Newsom, in other words, seems open to something like the system that Oregon voters approved in 2020, which involves state-licensed "psilocybin service centers" where adults can legally use that drug (the main psychoactive ingredient in "magic mushrooms") under the supervision of a "facilitator" after completing a "preparation session." That approach appeals to Newsom because it involves lots of regulation.
Oregon's first psilocybin service center opened in Eugene last June. "A client can wind up paying over $2,000, which helps cover service center expenses, a facilitator and lab-tested psilocybin," PBS reports. "Annual licenses for service centers and growers cost $10,000, with a half-price discount for veterans."
Notably, people who do not have $2,000 to spend on a single psilocybin session can still use that drug (or other psychedelics) in Oregon without exposing themselves to criminal penalties, which another ballot initiative that voters approved in 2020 eliminated. That option does not exist in California, and it sounds like it never will if Newsom has his way. As the governor sees it, regulated, taxed, and carefully supervised consumption of psychedelics "to address mental health" is acceptable, while the idea that adults should be free to use these drugs on their own, for whatever reasons they find compelling, is so outré that he thinks anyone who dares to do that should be subject to arrest.
Under current California law, possession of psilocybin is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail, although users may qualify for "drug treatment" instead—that is, they can avoid incarceration if they agree to accept professional "help" they probably do not need. People who grow psilocybin mushrooms can be charged with a felony punishable by up to three years in prison, and so can people who sell or transport those funny fungi. As far as Newsom is concerned, it seems, there is no injustice to remedy here—or at least, not anytime soon.
"Today's veto is a setback for the huge numbers of Californians—including combat veterans and first responders—who are safely using and benefiting from these non-addictive substances and who will now continue to be classified as criminals under California law," Wiener complained on Saturday. "This veto is a huge missed opportunity for California to follow the science and lead. This is not the end of our fight, however." Given "the Governor's commitment to work with the Legislature on legislation with a therapeutic focus," he said, "I look forward to introducing therapeutic-focused legislation next year."
A.B. 374, which Assemblymember Matt Haney (D–San Francisco) introduced in February, would have expanded the options for California residents and visitors who want to consume cannabis in a social setting. The bill, which passed the Legislature last month by a 66–9 vote in the Assembly and a 34–3 vote in the Senate, would have allowed dispensaries, with local approval, to serve marijuana along with non-cannabis food and beverages, which is currently illegal. It also would have explicitly allowed live music.
Again, this was a step too far for Newsom. "I appreciate the author's intent to provide cannabis retailers with increased business opportunities and an avenue to attract new customers," the governor wrote in his veto message on Sunday. "However, I am concerned this bill could undermine California's long-standing smoke-free workplace protections."
That was news to Haney. "We were not told about the concerns re the smoke free work environment from the health department over the past 7 months that we worked on this bill," he said on Monday. Haney noted that on-site pot smoking is already allowed under Proposition 64, the 2016 ballot measure that legalized recreational marijuana in California. What's not allowed is doing that in a setting where you can also eat, drink, and maybe listen to music.
"Lots of people want to enjoy legal cannabis in the company of others," Haney said. "There's absolutely no good reason from an economic, health, or safety standpoint that the state should make that illegal."
Haney's bill would have addressed a familiar problem. In California, as in other states where recreational use is legal, cannabis consumers have limited legal options when it comes to using the marijuana they are now allowed to buy. "Smoking cannabis is illegal outdoors, in all public places, in apartment buildings, and in automobiles," Haney noted. "Without onsite smoking being allowed in dispensaries, it would be functionally illegal for anyone other than homeowners and their guests to smoke cannabis in California."
In addition to giving consumers what they want, A.B. 374 would have helped licensed dispensaries compete with unlicensed dealers, who still account for something like two-thirds of marijuana sales in California. Haney described the bill as "an attempt to level the playing field for the highly taxed and regulated legal cannabis industry that is being forced to compete in California with a thriving cannabis black market." It was "really about fairness and supporting businesses that follow the rules," he said. "If we keep allowing unnecessary regulations to strangle California's legal cannabis businesses, we're just encouraging illegal drug sales and all of the problems that come with that."
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The key to understanding Gavin is realizing that from his perspective what is most bad about these bills is that they don't involve any public infrastructure. If you proposed building state-funded facilities for psychedelic and cannabis consumption he'd be all over it. It's the exact same logic by which the solution to the housing crisis is to forbid as much private construction as possible while ramping up publicly funded housing projects of various sorts.
The public schools are exactly the same way - the point of public schools, from the perspective of our politicians, is that they need facilities. Expensive ones.
All one needs to do to confirm that this is the case is to look at who funds the average CA politician - i.e. labor unions, construction contractors, and design/engineering firms.
No kickbacks, no graft, no signature.
And bureaucrats to fill and operate those facilities. Laws that create no new or expanded bureaucracies are DOA.
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And bureaucrats to fill and operate those facilities.
Yes - can't forget the SEIU.
Nail, meet head.
When all you have is a hammer, every solution needs to be a nail.
The key to understanding Gavin is realizing that from his perspective what is most bad about these bills is that they don’t involve any public infrastructure.
*Ding*Ding*Ding*
See my comment below, which is much more glib and much less clear...
Newsom and his ilk need to go.
i think this is the right insight.
Trying to look moderate so he can run for prez.
Happily for Gav, the CA state legislature provides him an endless stream of bullshit for him to veto as needed for image purposes.
His main complaint: The bills were excessively permissive and did not involve enough regulation.
Freedom means asking permission and obeying commands.
Freedom is slavery.
“It used to be the boast of free men that, so long as they kept within the bounds of the known law, there was no need to ask anybody’s permission or to obey anybody’s orders. It is doubtful whether any of us can make this claim today.” -Hayek
now multimillion dollar contracts are slavery.
He wants to be president. Before this is all over he’ll be denouncing gays.
surrender your soul's desire to be free.
So too much freedom is bad you see.
Standard dictator in chief gubment actions.
Both bills passed by a large majority and this one guy….”Nope”.
Especially ironic when it was his own party that brought these bills to the table.
Anyone think that these are scripted issues in order to make it so he can show he is more center for when he runs for POTUS?
This is nothing but window dressing for his future run for higher office.
So any bill that gets passed by a large majority shouldn't have any review by the Executive or Judicial branches?
I have access to 3 types of "psilocybin service centers", beaches, forests and hilltops. It costs less that $10 per therapy session and it's a lot more helpful than sitting in a sterile clinical setting with some idiot "guiding" you like you're tripping on weapons grade plutonium.
guides are authority.
Gavin has to show he’s a big enough dick for the wine moms to want to suck. Their teens might start shroomin or getting stoned if it’s not regulated enough
"Both peer-reviewed science and powerful personal anecdotes lead me to support new opportunities to address mental health through psychedelic medicines like those addressed in this bill," Newsom wrote in his veto message on Saturday. "Psychedelics have proven to relieve people suffering from certain conditions such as depression, PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and…addictive personality traits. This is an exciting frontier and California will be on the front-end of leading it."
Once again, be very wary of DNC retards bearing gifts to Libertarians.
The Scientism(tm) says these things are good, if delivered for therapeutic purposes only, based on clear guidance from Rochelle Walensky and Randi Weingarten, after proper funding and research performed by Anthony Fauci at a lab in Wuhan.
Actor Ronald Reagan got elected CA guvner, then stomped on harmless LSD as the earthly embodiment of Satan with cloven hooves and pointy tail. Three terms later, as President, he was able to appoint judges eager to reenslave women under Comstockism. He joined forces with Biden to destroy every economy on both American continents with plant prohibition/confiscation laws that would have shocked Bert Hoover and appointee Harry Anslinger. This neeew California looter guv is following the script that worked.
Tell hospice to up your meds Hank.
Did anyone really fall for Democrats bogus lie of being the party of De-Regulation? It's the party of the [WE] mob RULES those 'icky' people (ref: The party of slavery). And when their definition of the 'icky' gets clouded by agreement they'll roll-over faster than a barrel down a hill into authoritarianism. The parties entire history follows this pattern. Enter their biggest scam of going from the most racist slavery party literally launching a civil war into the supposed racial justice party - the roll-over to once again being the most racist party against white males. There is no principle to be found in a party based on the [WE] mob RULES foundation only a pursuit of who the [WE] mob is and who the 'icky' people are. Chicken-pecking 101.