Biden's Spin on Marijuana's Rescheduling Exaggerates Its Practical Impact
Contrary to the president's rhetoric, moving marijuana to Schedule III will leave federal pot prohibition essentially unchanged.

President Joe Biden describes the Drug Enforcement Administration's proposal to reclassify marijuana under federal law as "monumental." How so? "It's an important move toward reversing longstanding inequities," Biden claims in a video posted on Thursday. "Today's announcement builds on the work we've already done to pardon a record number of federal offenses for simple possession of marijuana, and it adds to the action we've taken to lift barriers to housing, employment, small business loans, and so much more for tens of thousands of Americans."
Even allowing for 60 days of public comment and review of a final rule by Congress and the Office of Management and Budget, marijuana's rescheduling could be finalized before the presidential election. And even if it does not take effect before then, Biden is hoping the move will help motivate younger voters whose turnout could be crucial to his re-election. But he also had better hope those voters are not paying much attention to the practical consequences of rescheduling marijuana, which are much more modest than his rhetoric implies.
"Look, folks," Biden says in the video, "no one should be in jail merely for using or possessing marijuana. Period. Far too many lives have been upended because of [our] failed approach to marijuana, and I'm committed to righting those wrongs." Yet rescheduling marijuana will not decriminalize marijuana use, even for medical purposes. It will not legalize state-licensed marijuana businesses or resolve the growing conflict between federal prohibition and state laws that authorize those businesses. It will not stop the war on weed or do much to ameliorate the injustice it inflicts.
In accordance with a recommendation that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) made last August, the DEA plans to move marijuana from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, a list of completely prohibited drugs, to Schedule III, which includes prescription medications such as ketamine, Tylenol with codeine, and anabolic steroids. Schedule I supposedly is reserved for drugs with a high abuse potential and no accepted medical applications that cannot be used safely even under a doctor's supervision.
When Biden directed HHS to review marijuana's legal status in October 2022, he noted that "we classify marijuana at the same level as heroin" and treat it as "more serious than fentanyl," which "makes no sense." On Thursday, he likewise noted that "marijuana has a higher-level classification than fentanyl and methamphetamine—the two drugs driving America's overdose epidemic."
Biden is right that marijuana's current classification makes no sense, as critics have been pointing out for half a century and as HHS belatedly acknowledged in explaining the rationale for rescheduling. HHS found "credible scientific support" for marijuana's use in the treatment of pain, nausea and vomiting, and "anorexia related to a medical condition." It also noted that "the risks to the public health posed by marijuana are low compared to other drugs of abuse," such as heroin (Schedule I), cocaine (Schedule II), benzodiazepines like Valium and Xanax (Schedule IV), and alcohol (unscheduled).
Although "abuse of marijuana produces clear evidence of harmful consequences, including substance use disorder," HHS said, they are "less common and less harmful" than the negative consequences associated with other drugs. It concluded that "the vast majority of individuals who use marijuana are doing so in a manner that does not lead to dangerous outcomes to themselves or others."
According to the DEA's proposed rule, Attorney General Merrick Garland, who holds the ultimate authority to reschedule drugs under the CSA, "concurs with HHS's conclusion" that marijuana has currently accepted medical uses. Garland also "concurs with" the assessment that "marijuana has a potential for abuse less than the drugs or other substances in schedules I and II." And he agrees that "the abuse of marijuana may lead to moderate or low physical dependence, depending on frequency and degree of marijuana exposure."
Those conclusions are "monumental" in the sense that HHS, the DEA, and the Justice Department are finally acknowledging what most Americans already knew. Abandoning the pretense that marijuana meets the criteria for Schedule I represents progress in that sense, although it comes after decades of legal wrangling in which HHS and the DEA took the opposite position, at a time when 38 states have legalized medical use of marijuana, two dozen have taken the further step of legalizing recreational use, and an overwhelming majority of Americans oppose pot prohibition.
In practical terms, the two main benefits of moving marijuana to Schedule III are fewer regulatory barriers to medical research and a financial boon to state-licensed cannabis suppliers, who will no longer be barred from deducting standard business expenses when they file their federal tax returns. But when Biden calls it "an important move toward reversing longstanding inequities" and links it to "righting [the] wrongs" suffered by cannabis consumers, he is promising more than rescheduling can possibly deliver.
Although Biden promised to "decriminalize the use of cannabis" during his 2020 campaign, rescheduling does not do that. Nor do the pardons he touts. Despite those two moves, low-level marijuana possession will remain a federal offense punishable by a minimum $1,000 fine and up to a year in jail. Only Congress can change that. Biden has invested little, if any, effort in urging it to do so, and he opposes outright federal legalization based on "gateway drug" concerns that pot prohibitionists have been voicing since the 1950s.
Neither rescheduling nor pardons will remove the unfair "barriers" that Biden decries. Although Biden claims he is "expunging thousands of convictions," that is not true, since pardons do not entail expungement. Nor do pardons eliminate the various legal disabilities associated with marijuana convictions, cannabis consumption, or participation in the cannabis industry, which include loss of Second Amendment rights (a policy that Biden defends) and ineligibility for admission, legal residence, and citizenship under immigration law.
As his pardons reflect, Biden's concern about unjust incarceration is curiously limited. Because those pardons did not apply to people convicted of growing or selling marijuana, they did not free a single federal prisoner. Neither will rescheduling.
With marijuana in Schedule III, state-licensed marijuana businesses will remain criminal enterprises under federal law, albeit subject to less draconian penalties. "If marijuana is transferred into schedule III," the DEA notes, "the manufacture, distribution, dispensing, and possession of marijuana would remain subject to the applicable criminal prohibitions of the CSA."
For that reason, rescheduling is unlikely to reassure financial institutions that are leery of serving marijuana businesses because it could expose them to devastating criminal, civil, and regulatory penalties. "Because marijuana would remain a controlled substance under the CSA," the law firm Debevoise & Plimpton notes, "its rescheduling would not immediately impact the potential legal risks to financial institutions (and other parties) considering whether to provide services to marijuana businesses."
If marijuana is listed along with prescription drugs, doesn't that at least mean that it can legally be used as a medicine? No, because doctors can prescribe only specific products that have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Unless and until new cannabis-based medicines pass muster with the FDA, they will not be legal for doctors to prescribe or patients to use.
These points are easily overlooked in the hoopla surrounding the rescheduling announcement. But the limitations of Biden's "monumental" policy shift are clear from the reactions of activists and the cannabis industry.
"This recommendation validates the experiences of tens of millions of Americans, as well as tens of thousands of physicians, who have long recognized that cannabis possesses legitimate medical utility," said Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, which first urged the DEA to reschedule marijuana back in 1972. "But it still falls well short of the changes necessary to bring federal marijuana policy into the 21st century. Specifically, the proposed change fails to harmonize federal marijuana policy with the cannabis laws of most U.S. states, particularly the 24 states that have legalized its use and sale to adults."
The review from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) was similarly mixed. "President Biden's decision to reschedule marijuana is the most significant step any American president has taken to address the harms of the war on marijuana," Cynthia W. Roseberry, director of policy and government affairs at the ACLU's Justice Division, said in an emailed statement. "While it is an incredibly encouraging step in the right direction, the rescheduling does not end criminal penalties for marijuana or help the people currently serving sentences for marijuana offenses."
John Mueller, CEO of the Greenlight dispensary chain, likewise noted what rescheduling will not do. "This is a monumental moment," he said in an emailed press release, "but we still have a long way to go to rectify the injustices of the War on Drugs. The recent strides in cannabis rescheduling mark a significant departure from a failed 50-year prohibition policy. We must continue this momentum by calling on our state and federal leaders to prioritize the release of individuals incarcerated for cannabis-related offenses. This is not just about acknowledging the legitimacy of the cannabis industry, but also about rectifying the disproportionate impact of outdated policies on marginalized communities.…It's time to right the wrongs of the past and embrace progress wholeheartedly."
Aaron Smith, CEO of the National Cannabis Industry Association, had a similar take. "On behalf of thousands of legal businesses operating across the country, we commend President Biden for taking this important first step toward a more rational marijuana policy," he said. "Now it's time for Congress to enact legislation that would protect our industry, uphold public safety, and advance the will of the voters who overwhelmingly support making cannabis legal for adults. Rescheduling alone does not fix our nation's state and federal cannabis policy conflict. Only Congress can enact the legislation needed to fully respect the states and advance the will of the vast majority of voters who support legal cannabis."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Maybe marijuana use can help Biden’s dementia and frequent pants shitting.
Depends.
I think it’s a trial run for the real rescheduling, of cocaine, retroactive to the day before Hunter signed that 44-whatever form at the gun shop.
He gets the headlines he wants. Biden got all he needed out of this idiotic stance.
And, of course, the media cannot wait to praise him for his usual doing of jack shit.
True story, third hand. A good buddy of mine has a brother who is police, and therefore knows a lot of state patrol. He was talking to an SP guy who would regularly be assigned to Biden motorcade when he was in town. Guy said they often had to stop and cool their heels for 45 minutes while they changed the president's diapers at some random place along the route.
True story or part of a smear campaign?
Must be true. No one could make up a detail like using a third hand to do the changing.
One would have to be in a state of Zen to handle that doody day in and day out.
Carpe BM
Squeeze the Day
Atta Boy! I knew you could do it!
On a scale of Biden to ten, being Biden’s diaper changer has got to be a #2 or perhaps sometimes a #3.
Well ... 1 + 2 = 3, I gotta hand it to you.
If any of the staff that never changed Biden’s diapers make claims that they did, it would be a case of stoolen valor.
Oh boy, take a shower and get 3-upped!
The Presidential team responsible for this must always be flush with diapers in case an emergency stop at a store reveals the shelves were wiped clean.
Good thing the toilet paper shortage was on Trump's watch.
For some folks, finding a roll of toilet paper was like playing Where in the World is Charmin San Diego?
Sometimes, you just have to roll with it.
Total smear campaign. Now if he added Joe needed to stop to do a line of coke and rape a child I would believe him
He can't even change his own?
It is a PLANT.
So is Coca.
So are opium poppies.
Personally, don't give a shit if pot makes you schizo, the concept of scheduling it, the whole DEA bureaucracy having any hand in the scheduling, and the fact that it was up there with the (theoretically) most dangerous and addictive substances on said schedule are all evidence that government should be as severely limited on any issue as possible lest it metastasize into a ridiculous beast.
But I've heard the "it's a plant" argument a lot. It rings hollow.
Pot shouldn't be "scheduled" because it's ubiquitous, and because adults can make their own decisions. As long as they don't rob me because they've gone schizo and need their fix, nobody should give a shit.
I also have no issue with someone having the coco plant around. Still just a plant. Or opium poppies. Plant.
^ This
None of us, based on libertarian principles, do.
My whole point was that the government does it to a lot of stuff like that, scheduling a lot of "plants" and other substances, many of which aren't hard to make at home.
Which is how government works, letting them do a little regulation lets the camel's nose under the tent. They'll keep doing more to justify their existence, including never ceding any ground in the drug war, even when it's reasonable. Why would the DEA ever do otherwise? Doing so would massively reduce their funding, cost agents their jobs, and reduce their power significantly.
As for "it's a plant," it's not a good argument. It's a bumper sticker slogan. And it detracts from the point, it's not about whether it's natural. The real issue is that the DEA (and their associates) has too much power, and power corrupts. Absolutely, always.
Are you saying that they always want more? That it's never enough? Always more.
Not only does power tend to corrupt, but perhaps more importantly, the corrupt are attracted to power.
Did you know that it's legal to grow opium poppies as long as you don't know what they are?
I do not either.
...as long as literally not one penny of my money stolen in taxes is used to take care of the problem.
If ANY of it is, then fuck you. You do not get to steal my money.
So is nightshade and a number of other fatal poison sources. Get it off these lists because the effects minimal or manageable in reasonable doses like caffeine or alcohol not for stupid reasons like it's origin.
Poison hemlock grows everywhere. I don't see any reason to control it or be afraid of it. Killing someone with it would still be wrong, but it is still just a plant.
How is that slam dunk documents case going against Trump you Leftist twat?
The walls are closing in!
^+100 Nice handle.
Sullum is shocked that the lying regime he voted for is lying.
Performative Bitching is a descriptor you might find useful.
The whole damned thing is Kabuki.
Sullum has been an excellent advocate for the decriminalization, deregulation and truthful information of the least hazardous drugs.
Unfortunately, Sullum's TDS has made it impossible for him to write an objective article about Donald Trump.
Yes. I've often said Sullum should stick to drugs and guns and stay away from the electoral politics.
I agree.
Biden is trying to get votes for decriminalizing pot, but he's lying and isn't decriminalizing pot. By this, he's revealing he (err his handlers) knows most of the public wants it legalized, but the political class won't let go of the laws that lets them abuse many people who smoke pot and don't harm anyone else.
While Biden undoes all of Trump's libertarian free market EOs, implements more regulations, and lies to us about everything (he's so authoritarian), I fail to find a good reason for Sullum's TDS. Mean tweets are political speech, and Trump's alleged authoritarianism is something the political class had the MSM brainwashing the public about, partly thanks to Trump's rhetoric (but not his actions!). Trump did what he could when the RINOs, the Democrats and the political class were all against him. The actions they took border on treason IMHO.
...
Why do you keep lying about this? Doctors, and non-doctors, can prescribe anything they want. It’s about the filling of the prescriptions, not the prescribing. Prescribing is subject to freedom of speech and the press. Filling prescriptions is about dispensing product.
So? Joe Biden wants everyone to cheer each time he manages to shit in the toilet and not his pants. Yesterday, he was trying to take credit for the dow going above 40k. Fine me a freakin break.
Lying liar lies some more.