by Brett LoGiurato
More lawmakers are toking — er, signing — up their names
to become co-sponsors of a bill that would legalize marijuana for
medicinal purposes at a federal level.
Veteran Democrat Barbara Boxer, the longest-serving woman in Congress, added her name to a list of co-sponsors of the bill, according to Roll Call.
“Senator Boxer is a strong supporter of California’s
medical marijuana law and she believes that patients, doctors and
caregivers in states like California should be able to follow state law
without fear of federal prosecution,” Zachary Coile, Boxer’s
communications director, said in a statement to The Washington Post.
The bill
was rolled out on March 10 by Sens. Cory Booker (D-New Jersey), Kirsten
Gillibrand (D-New York), and Rand Paul (R-Kentucky). It would
reschedule marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule II drug to
recognize its legitimate medical uses.
Since the release of the bill, Republican Sen. Dean Heller
(Nevada) has also signed on. In a statement that hints at the
conservative reasoning behind supporting the bill, Heller said it was
“time for the federal government to stop impeding the doctor-patient
relationship.”
Indeed, 23 states have legalized marijuana for some
medical purposes, and more could soon follow suit. But there still might
be weed whackers in Washington who prevent action on the bill this
year.
That includes Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the chair of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, which will have jurisdiction over the bill.
“It’s a matter of what are our priorities,” Grassley told Roll Call when asked if he would schedule a hearing on the bill.
Maine tribes looking at selling pot to boost health, business
Three Native American tribes in Maine are weighing legalizing marijuana on their lands, according to The Portland Press Herald. And at least one of those tribes is thinking about selling marijuana commercially.
The Justice Department announced late last year that it
would permit Native American tribes to legalize and regulate marijuana
on its lands, provided they abide by similar guidelines as states that
have chosen to legalize the substance.
The option has proved intriguing for Native American tribes — especially on an economic front. According to a recent study
from the Pew Research Center, more than one in four people who identify
as Native American or Alaska Natives live in poverty. One tribe visited
by President Barack Obama last year had a poverty rate that tripled the
national average.
“We are looking from a health perspective as well as an
economic perspective into the potential. We are gathering information
about it,” said Rep. Henry John Bear, who represents the Maliseet tribe
in the Maine Legislature, according to the Press Herald. “We have tribal
members who are very interested in pursuing this. I have been
approached by these members to get information.”
Bill de Blasio makes superb dad pot joke
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio says he hasn’t smoked pot since college, but he likes to be in on the joke about questions surrounding his pot-smoking habits.
De Blasio was featured in a video
Thursday promoting the Inner Circle, an event where he tells jokes a
crowd of politicos and political reporters to help raise money for
charity. The video also features a “professional” de Blasio
“impersonator.”
When the real de Blasio asks his impersonator, “What about
the whole marijuana thing?” — as if to say, how are you going to
address it at the event — the impersonator thinks he means something
totally different.
“Oh, totally, yeah. I’ve got 25 grams in my bag outside if you want to go spark it to the dome,” the impersonator says.
“No, no, no!” de Blasio says. “I mean, what are you going to say about it?”
“Ohhh. Right, right, right, right, right,” the impersonator responds. “I will say … that … I just ran out.”
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