Select Page

It “remains to be seen” how President Donald Trump will navigate marijuana policy in his second term, and it’s “unknown” whether the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) will finalize a proposed rule to reschedule cannabis, congressional researchers say in a new report.

In an analysis published last week that broadly overviews the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA), the Congressional Research Service (CRS) discussed a number of cannabis-specific issues for lawmakers to consider as the 119th Congress gets underway.

“Recent years saw developments in marijuana law and policy, including a growing divergence between federal and state marijuana laws, a 2022 presidential grant of clemency for federal and D.C. marijuana possession offenses, and 2024 DEA rulemaking proceedings proposing to reschedule marijuana under the CSA,” the report says.

What’s uncertain, however, is what’s next to come under Trump’s second term—a question top of mind for advocates and stakeholders.

Some are holding out hope that the president’s endorsement of rescheduling, marijuana industry banking access and a 2024 Florida legalization ballot initiative during the campaign—as well as his stated support for states’ rights to set their own cannabis laws—will motivate the GOP-controlled Congress to take action.

Others are skeptical, pointing to anti-marijuana leadership in both the House and Senate as well as controversial administrative figures like the acting head of DEA who has made sensational claims about cannabis use and repeatedly criticized the rescheduling process that unfolded under the Biden administration.

“It remains to be seen what approach President Trump’s second Administration will take toward marijuana regulation,” CRS said, adding that while the president’s first attorney general in his first term rescinded federal guidance on marijuana enforcement priorities, “the number of DEA marijuana arrests fell every year during the first Trump Administration.”

The researchers also said “it is unknown whether DOJ will finalize the proposal and, if so, what controls the agency would impose on marijuana.”

Read more at Marijuana Moment

Share via
Copy link