Marijuana One Step Close to Legalization Thanks to House of Representatives

Every few years, there is a fight about whether marijuana should be legalized or decriminalized.

Many states have previously enacted legislation in some form. There are currently 18 states that have fully legalized marijuana, with many more decriminalizing it and allowing medical exceptions.

A bill to legalize marijuana has just cleared the House of Representatives. The MORE Act, which legalizes marijuana, was enacted by the House of Representatives with a vote of 220-204.

So, once the bill reaches the Senate, the question is: what will happen? Will they support it or oppose it?

I don’t believe the answer is simple, and I believe that it might go either way. Because the Senate is split down the middle, if any Democrats vote no and any Republicans vote yes, your conclusion will be reached.

So, is there anything that leads us to believe that either party will depart from their party’s vote and go the other way?

Mark Jones, a professor of political science at Rice University says the MORE Act will likely pass in the House, but not in the Senate.

“When it goes to the Senate, it’s probably dead on arrival for two principal reasons. First, it needs 10 Republicans to support it if all of the Democrats do so and right now, the votes aren’t there,” said Jones.

He added that Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer is not very keen on the MORE Act since he has his own marijuana decriminalization legislation to bring out later this year.

Jones says he suspects there are three or four Republican senators in favor of this legislation, but it will still not be enough for it to pass.

However, Jones said there has been a shift and there are a growing number of Republicans getting on board with decriminalizing marijuana.

“Republicans tend to support the decriminalization of marijuana either for fiscal reasons that is less government and more tax dollars from it, or from a libertarian perspective that the government shouldn’t be involved in these types of personal decisions,” said Jones.

So, if Chuck Schumer is against the bill, he’ll be able to rally some of his loyalists to back him on it so that he can push his own bill later this year instead.

I do think that at some point, one of these bills will pass and marijuana will be legalized or decriminalized. I don’t know what they’ll do about the prior convictions though.

Send this to a friend