The United States lawmakers backed the decriminalisation of marijuana nationwide in a vote on Friday that would eliminate punishments for providing or possessing the drug if signed into law by President Joe Biden.
The Democrats’ Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act would remove its categorisation as a dangerous “schedule 1” controlled substance alongside much harder narcotics that attracted severe sentences, like heroin and Lysergic acid diethylamide.
The bill cleared the House by 220 votes to 204, with three Republicans crossing the aisle, but analysts were skeptical about its prospects in the Senate, where Democrats would need 10 opposition lawmakers to overcome a 60-vote hurdle.
The US government was out of line with three-quarters of states that had legalised marijuana for medical use and a third of states, like California and Washington, that had freed it for recreational use.
“If states are the laboratories of democracy, it is long past time for the federal government to recognize that this experiment in legalisation has been a resounding success,” said, House Judiciary Committee Chairman, Jerry Nadler, one of the bill’s sponsors.
Cannabis is one of the fastest-growing industries in the United States, with sales hitting $25 billion in 2021, according to the influential cannabis website Leafly, and projected to reach $40.5 billion by 2025.
A report released in February by the Seattle-based company said that the legalised cannabis industry provided work for more than 400,000 Americans and created some 280 new jobs a day last year.
California, the first state to legalise medical marijuana in 1996, made $1 billion in tax revenue in the first two years after expanding to full recreational use in 2018.
But marijuana remained illegal under federal law, posing significant hurdles for businesses that find themselves barred from accessing financial services and unable to secure loans or open bank accounts.
The MORE Act would provide loans to help small businesses “owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals,” the bill read.
Many people arrested for marijuana use would see their records expunged, and those jailed on federal cannabis charges would have their sentences reviewed.
A federal tax would begin at five percent, with proceeds funding substance abuse treatment and legal counseling for the overwhelmingly Black communities harmed by the war on drugs.
“For over 50 years, the failed war on drugs has deepened racial injustice, shattered neighborhoods, and decimated communities,” said, senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, Aamra Ahmad.
The reform was hugely popular among Americans. A research poll found last year that 91 percent of adults thought marijuana should be legal, either medically, recreationally, or both.
But Republicans argue that decriminalization will increase use and create another layer of bureaucracy in the Treasury Department.
A similar bill passed in the House in 2020 in a vote divided largely along party lines, went nowhere in the then-Republican majority Senate.
Campaigners for legal reform applauded the vote, noting that Black people were almost four times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession as whites, even though usage statistics were similar.
“Now is the time for the Senate to act on sensible reform legislation so that we can finally end the failure of prohibition and foster a well-regulated marketplace for cannabis,” added, Chief Executive Officer of the country’s largest marijuana trade association, the National Cannabis Industry Association, Aaron Smith.
AFP