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The attorney general of Florida and several business and anti-marijuana groups are telling the state Supreme Court to block a cannabis legalization initiative, calling it “fatally flawed” and unconstitutional as advocates work against the clock to qualify the measure for the November ballot. In a series of briefs submitted to the court on Friday, Attorney General James Uthmeier (R), Drug Free America Foundation, Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Legal Foundation, Associated Industries of Florida and a former judge made similar arguments contesting the initiative from Smart and Safe Florida. The parties generally contend that the proposal is written in a way that’s affirmatively misleading, runs counter to federal law prohibiting cannabis and violates the state’s single subject rule for ballot initiatives. The attorney general called the measure “fatally flawed,” arguing that it “misleads voters in a way designed to garner greater approval, is flatly invalid under the federal Constitution, and violates the single-subject requirement. The Court should therefore strike the proposed amendment from the ballot.” Each of those reasons alone, the brief said, “warrants removal from the ballot.” The attorney general’s office last month asked the state Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of the legalization initiative. The court accepted the request and set a schedule for state officials and the cannabis campaign to file briefs this month. Proponents of the measure have until January 12 to submit response briefs, then the opposition has until January 20 to reply. New material in Re: Adult Personal Use of Marijuana (initial briefs). See the docket here: https://t.co/02OMKcLXl3 pic.twitter.com/JxvNNWGyPh — FloridaSupremeCourt (@flcourts) January 3, 2026 “The ballot summary impermissibly misleads voters about the actual effect of the proposed amendment,” Uthmeier said, arguing that the way the proposal is written suggests public consumption of marijuana would be entirely prohibited, but it would actually only ban public use in certain designated areas. The brief says that “countless dictionaries, legal authorities, and common sense dictate that ‘in public’ is a far broader term that covers everything from the local grocery store, fitness center, to the shopping mall.” “That divergence between summary and amendment misleads voters and is fatal under this Court’s established precedent. After all, polling routinely shows that most Americans oppose the smell of marijuana ‘in public.’ The ballot summary would lead voters to believe that voting yes would ensure there is no marijuana—or its smell—’in public,’ while the actual amendment delivers no such thing. The ‘in public’ summary language would likewise deceive Florida parents into thinking this initiative will prohibit marijuana smoking near their children in hotels, restaurants, sports venues, and other areas open to the general public. The initiative provides no such protection.” Further, the attorney general’s brief argues that the initiative “fails” because it’s “facially invalid under the United States Constitution.” Given that marijuana remains federally prohibited drug under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), “the initiative runs head long into the Supremacy Clause, which ensures that federal law ‘shall be the supreme Law of the Land…any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding,'” it says. “The initiative seeks to ensure access to a robust recreational marijuana market, including by requiring state regulators to assist in guaranteeing the ‘availability’ of marijuana,” the brief continues. “But state law cannot ’empower[]’ people ‘to do precisely what the federal Act forbids them to do,’ and the initiative stands directly athwart Congress’s objectives in enacting the CSA.” Of course, Florida already allows patients with qualifying conditions to access medical cannabis in contravention of federal law—albeit with unique protections under a congressional rider that must be annually renewed through the appropriations process. In any case, the attorney general said the federal-state policy disconnect “warrants removal from the ballot.” “The Legislature added this statutory requirement to its law regulating the initiative process, which the Florida Constitution authorized it to do,” the brief said. “And the Supremacy Clause is as much a part of the ‘United States Constitution’ as any other provision, so faithfully ensuring that the proposal is not facially invalid includes preemption analysis stemming from any validly enacted federal law, like the CSA.” The office’s final argument is that the initiative “violates the single-subject requirement” for Florida ballot measures, referring to the idea that the proposal improperly touches on multiple aspects of the law, including legalizing possession and regulating the cannabis industry. “The constitutional text imposes a rigid requirement on the specificity of initiatives,” Uthmeier said. “This Court has, at times, applied a more relaxed view of what constitutes a single subject. But text, context, and precedent confirm that ‘subject’ must be read narrowly. And under this proper view, any matter must be inextricably intertwined to be ‘directly connected’ under a single subject.” “But the initiative fails either under this proper standard or under the Court’s current oneness-of-purpose test. The proposed amendment spreads far beyond marijuana legalization and extends to childhood advertising bans, business licensing, and permissible marijuana business structures. These disparate facets of the initiative muddle voter choice and propose wide-ranging changes to Florida’s legal landscape. The single-subject requirement—as originally and properly understood—exists to prevent this dynamic.” The Drug Free America Foundation, meanwhile, said in its brief that “proponents for recreational marijuana use in Florida have attempted to dodge the legislative process by way of constitutional amendment,” and this “latest iteration of the marijuana ballot initiative is fatally flawed and must be stricken from the ballot.” It echoes the attorney general’s position that the measure is “facially invalid” because it conflicts with federal law that “unequivocally prohibits anyone from possessing or using marijuana for nearly every purpose.” “Therefore, if Florida were to pass the Proposed Amendment, it would create a positive conflict because the use and possession of marijuana remains federally illegal,” it said. “And under the well-established hierarchy of law, no state constitutional amendment can surpass the dictates of federal law and cure federally illegal activity within the state.” The Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Legal Foundation and Judge Frank Shepherd filed a separate joint brief stating that the parties remain “especially vigilant about the abuse of the citizen initiative process by out-of-state interests that think of Florida as just another market and the citizen initiative process as just another means of exploiting that market.” “The initiative, titled ‘Adult Personal Use of Marijuana,’ poses several problems,” it says. “Any one of these problems is enough to keep the initiative off the ballot. Together they highlight its fundamental flaws.” The Florida Chamber of Commerce has consistently opposed attempts to move forward with adult-use legalization, even as its own polling has shown majority support for the reform. “First, state law can’t make legal what federal law makes illegal,” it said. “Federal law makes illegal the acquisition, cultivation, processing, transportation, and sale of marijuana. The proposed constitutional amendment tries to make all this legal.” “What’s more, the State of Florida would become complicit in the federal crime. That’s because the state would license businesses engaged in acquisition, cultivation, processing, transportation, and sale of the drug. The state’s legalization and commercialization of recreational marijuana would create a positive conflict with federal law, making compliance with both impossible. Even if a person or business could comply with both, the proposed amendment would frustrate federal objectives, meaning there would be obstacle preemption.” The brief also asserts that the scope of the proposal is too broad for a constitutional amendment that advocates hope to be decided by voters because it “permits higher-level changes to how laws are made, not the enactment of specific statutory text. The latter is the legislature’s job.” The parties repeated claims about violating the single-subject requirement for ballot measures and the idea that the ballot summary is “misleading” because of the public smoking provisions. “While the initiative contains a prohibition on this conduct, it includes no enforcement mechanisms or penalties. There isn’t even a requirement for the legislature to create the relevant enforcement mechanisms or penalties,” it says. “Without more, voters are left with the impression that they don’t have to worry about marijuana smoke in public parks or colorful gummies attractive to children. But a toothless prohibition like this is no prohibition at all. It seems intended only to hoodwink voters.” Associated Industries of Florida also claimed in its own brief that the initiative is invalid because “the state-facilitated recreational marijuana industry envisioned by the proposed amendment conflicts on its face with the federal Controlled Substances Act,” while similarly arguing that it violates the single-subject rule and misleads voters based on the summary language. The briefs were filed days after Smart and Safe Florida filed a new lawsuit against state officials, alleging that they improperly directed the invalidation of about 71,000 signatures as a turn-in deadline approaches. The campaign has been fighting several legal battles this cycle to ensure that its initiative is able to qualify for ballot placement. The latest lawsuit, filed in the Leon County circuit court, claims Secretary of State Cord Byrd (R) directed county election officials to invalidate about 42,000 signatures from so-called “inactive” voters and roughly 29,000 signatures collected by out-of-state petitioners. This comes after another court upheld a previous decision to strike about 200,000 signatures that the state said were invalid because the petitions didn’t include the full text of the proposed initiative. The campaign contested the legal interpretation, but it declined to appeal the decision based on their confidence they’d collected enough signatures to make up the difference. Now, with a February 1 deadline to submit 880,062 valid signatures just about a month away, Smart & Safe Florida is signaling that the additional invalidations could jeopardize their chances of making the ballot. Currently, the state has validated 675,307 signatures. Activists said in November that they’d collected more than one million signatures to put the cannabis measure on the ballot, but it’s also challenged officials at the state Supreme Court level over delays the certification process, arguing that the review of the ballot content and summary should have moving forward months ago when it reached an initial signature threshold. The state then agreed to move forward with the processing. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) campaigned heavily against an earlier version of the legalization proposal, which received a majority of voters last year but not enough to meet the 60 percent threshold required to pass a constitutional amendment. Former Attorney General Ashley Moody (R) unsuccessfully contested the prior initiative in the courts. In March, meanwhile, two Democratic members of Congress representing Florida asked the federal government to investigate what they described as “potentially unlawful diversion” of millions in state Medicaid funds via a group with ties to DeSantis. The money was used to fight against a citizen ballot initiative, vehemently opposed by the governor, that would have legalized marijuana for adults. The lawmakers’ letter followed allegations that a $10 million donation from a state legal settlement was improperly made to the Hope Florida Foundation, which later sent the money to two political nonprofits, which in turn sent $8.5 million to a campaign opposing Amendment 3. The governor said last February that the newest marijuana legalization measure is in “big time trouble” with the state Supreme Court, predicting it would be blocked from going before voters this year. “There’s a lot of different perspectives on on marijuana,” DeSantis said. “It should not be in our Constitution. If you feel strongly about it, you have elections for the legislature. Go back candidates that you believe will be able to deliver what your vision is on that.” “But when you put these things in the Constitution—and I think, I mean, the way they wrote, there’s all kinds of things going on in here. I think it’s going to have big time trouble getting through the Florida Supreme Court,” he said. The latest initiative was filed with the secretary of state’s office just months after the initial version failed during the November 2024 election—despite an endorsement from President Donald Trump. Smart & Safe Florida is hoping the revised version will succeed in 2026. The campaign—which in the last election cycle received tens of millions of dollars from cannabis industry stakeholders, principally the multi-state operator Trulieve—incorporated certain changes into the new version that seem responsive to criticism opponents raised during the 2024 push. For example, it now specifically states that the “smoking and vaping of marijuana in any public place is prohibited.”Another section asserts that the legislature would need to approve rules dealing with the “regulation of the time, place, and manner of the public consumption of marijuana.” In 2023, the governor accurately predicted that the 2024 cannabis measure from the campaign would survive a legal challenge from the state attorney general. It’s not entirely clear why he feels this version would face a different outcome. While there’s uncertainty around how the state’s highest court will navigate the measure, a poll released last February showed overwhelming bipartisan voter support for the reform—with 67 percent of Florida voters backing legalization, including 82 percent of Democrats, 66 percent of independents and 55 percent of Republicans. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — In the background, a recent poll from a Trump-affiliated research firm found that nearly 9 in 10 Florida voters say they should have the right to decide to legalize marijuana in the state. Meanwhile, a pro-legalization GOP state lawmaker recently filed a bill to amend state law to codify that the public use of marijuana is prohibited. Rep. Alex Andrade (R), the sponsor, said last year that embracing cannabis reform is a way for the Republican party to secure more votes from young people. Separately, Florida medical marijuana officials are actively revoking the registrations of patients and caregivers with drug-related criminal records. The policy is part of broad budget legislation signed into law last year by DeSantis. The provisions in question direct the state Department of Health (DOH) to cancel registrations of medical marijuana patients and caregivers if they’re convicted of—or plead guilty or no contest to—criminal drug charges. Meanwhile, last month, a Florida Republican senator filed a bill to expand the state’s medical marijuana program, in part by increasing supply limits for patients and waiving registration fees for honorably discharged military veterans. The post Florida Attorney General Asks Supreme Court To Block Marijuana Legalization Measure From Ballot appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says the marijuana rescheduling appeal process “remains pending” despite President Donald Trump’s recent executive order directing the attorney general to finish the job “in the most expeditious manner.” DEA and reform proponents on Monday submitted a joint status report on an interlocutory appeal that concerns allegations of agency bias and improper communications with anti-rescheduling parties during the rescheduling review process. “To date, Movants’ interlocutory appeal to the Administrator regarding their Motion to Reconsider remains pending with the Administrator,” DEA said. “No briefing schedule has been set.” It’s up to the agency to set the briefing schedule. But nearly a year after the appeal was accepted by a former administrative law judge, DEA is again delaying the process. This is the fourth joint status report, with largely identical language, that the parties filed pursuant to the administrative court’s order. DEA Administrator Terrance Cole told senators during a confirmation hearing last year that examining the cannabis rescheduling proposal would be “one of my first priorities.” This latest filing comes just weeks after Trump signed an executive order calling on Attorney General Pam Bondi to expeditiously finalize a rule to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Meanwhile, a leading marijuana prohibitionist group says it’s retained the legal services of Trump’s former attorney general, Bill Barr, to sue to reverse federal marijuana rescheduling if and when the pending rule is finalized. And they’ll also be filing a petition through the administrative process to keep cannabis strictly prohibited. Moving cannabis to Schedule III wouldn’t legalize marijuana, but it would formally recognize the plant’s medical value, allow marijuana businesses to take federal tax deductions and remove certain research barriers. A recent report from the Congressional Research Service (CRS) noted that DOJ could in theory decline to enact rescheduling, or start the review process all over again, for example. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — An agriculture-focused conservative nonprofit connected to a PAC linked to the president recently applauded the rescheduling order, arguing that it will “destroy” the illicit market and support seniors and military veterans who could benefit from cannabis. Separately, a coalition of Republican state attorneys general are criticizing Trump’s rescheduling decision, saying cannabis is “properly” classified as a Schedule I drug with no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. Last month, groups of House and Senate Republican lawmakers also sent letters urging Trump not to reschedule cannabis. Trump, however, dismissed those concerns—pointing out that an overwhelming majority of Americans support the reform and that cannabis can help people who are suffering from serious health issues, including his personal friends. While the interlocutory appeal before DEA is on pause again with the latest filing, the agency did recently finalize quotas for legal production of controlled substances in 2026—further raising the amount of certain psychedelics that can be made for research purposes in the new year. Over recent years, DEA has generally ramped up production goals for marijuana and certain psychedelics as interest in their therapeutic potential has grown within the public and scientific community. Read the latest DEA filing in the rescheduling case below: The post DEA Says Marijuana Rescheduling Appeal Process ‘Remains Pending’ Despite Trump’s Executive Order appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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A GOP senator says his opposition to marijuana reform—and his conviction that cannabis is a “gateway drug”—hasn’t changed even after President Donald Trump signed a rescheduling order. Asked about the president’s directive to move marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) told Marijuana Moment that cannabis is a “gateway drug” and that his position is informed by the fact that his brother died from a drug overdose. Scott said he does “understand medicinal marijuana,” which voters in his state legalized via a constitutional amendment at the ballot in 2016. The senator, who previously served as Florida’s governor, also noted that a separate initiative to legalize recreational cannabis on the 2024 ballot failed to reached the 60 percent threshold needed to be enacted—though it did get majority support. Pressed on Trump’s assertion that rescheduling cannabis would free up research and whether he’d support the policy change in that respect, Scott said simply: “Why don’t we just do the research?” Scott was among a group of GOP lawmakers who sent a letter last month challenging the marijuana rescheduling push, urging the Trump administration to trash the policy proposal. Ahead of a vote on a Florida ballot initiative to legalize marijuana for adult use—which gained majority support but not enough to reach a 60 percent threshold—the senator pledged to do everything he could to defeat it. The campaign behind that initiative has mounted another push for the ballot, but activists have faced complications amid litigation and invalidated signatures from the state. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — As far as federal rescheduling is concerned, a bipartisan majority of American voters across nearly all major demographics—age, race, gender and political affiliation—support legalizing marijuana, according to a new poll released just days after Trump issued the executive order. The latest poll from the Daily Mail is generally consistent with the growing bipartisanship around marijuana legalization, but another recent survey from YouGov showed Republicans evenly divided on the issue, with 41 percent in favor and 41 percent against the broader reform. The rescheduling process initiated by the Biden administration, which Trump has now asked to be finalized, is still pending. Congressional researchers also recently released a report noting that there’s a chance the Justice Department could opt to start the process all over again, or even not complete it at all. But as prior polling has indicated, it’s a politically popular reform across the aisle. The president said last month that cannabis can “make people feel much better” and serve as a “substitute for addictive and potentially lethal opioid painkillers.” He clarified, however, that he personally has no interest in using marijuana himself. Trump also dismissed the concerns of GOP lawmakers who oppose rescheduling, pointing out that an overwhelming majority of Americans support the reform and that cannabis can help people—including his personal friends—who are suffering from serious health issues. The LCB contributed reporting from Washington, D.C. The post GOP Senator Claims Marijuana Is A ‘Gateway Drug,’ Voicing Opposition To Trump’s Rescheduling Order appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has finalized quotas for legal production of controlled substances in 2026—further raising the amount of certain psychedelics that can be made for research purposes in the new year. In a notice published in the Federal Register on Monday, DEA increased its quotas for psilocybin, psilocyn and DMT compared to what the agency proposed in its draft rule in November. DEA said in its initial proposal that it was moving to boost the quotas for the psychedelics substances so researchers can study whether they could serve as “potential treatment of conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression.” Based on public comments the agency received, it said the amounts were adjusted to be “at higher levels than were proposed,” without expanding on the specific rationale for the individual quota increases. The production goal for psilocybin rose from 30,000 grams last year to 40,000 grams in the initial rule for this year—and has now been raised to 50,000 grams in 2026’s final rule. The psilocyn quota increased from 36,000 grams in 2025 to 48,000 grams in the initial 2026 rule before being raised again to 80,000 grams in the final rule for 2026—more than doubling in the span of a year. For DMT, DEA is proposing to increase the quota from 20,000 grams last year to 25,000 grams in 2026. In the agency’s initial rule for this year, the quota for that psychedelic remained the same but has since been revised in the final rule following public feedback. Other substances that saw increases from last year in 2026’s initial rule have not been further adjusted in the new final rule. That is the case for methylone, an MDMA-like compound. In 2025, the agency set a goal of 5,200 grams, but in 2026 it wants 30,000 grams produced The production goal for the substance was minuscule four years ago, when DEA proposed the manufacturing of just 40 grams. The same quota was set in 2022 before increasing to 5,200 grams for each subsequent year until 2026, and is now being increased to 30,000 grams. DEA set a quota of 30,000 grams of 5-MeO-DMT to be produced in 2026—an increase from 11,000 grams last year. That is a substantial boost from 2021’s quota of just 35 grams. Over recent years, DEA has generally ramped up production goals for marijuana and certain psychedelics as interest in their therapeutic potential has grown within the public and scientific community. The proposed 2026 quotas for cannabis, THC, ibogaine, MDMA, LSD and mescaline were not adjusted since last year, however. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — “These proposed 2026 quotas reflect the quantities that DEA believes are necessary to meet the estimated medical, scientific, research, and industrial needs of the United States, lawful export requirements; and the establishment and maintenance of reserve stocks,” DEA said in its proposed rule in November. The agency said that, in setting the quotas, it took into account several factors, including “projected demand for such class as indicated by procurement quotas,” information obtained by federal health agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and “other factors affecting medical, scientific, research, and industrial needs in the United States and lawful export requirements.” The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) requires the attorney general to set APQs for Schedule I and Schedule II drugs each year. Notably, that would mean marijuana would not be part of this annual research production list if the Justice Department follows through on an executive order signed by President Donald Trump last month directing the attorney general to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III. Whether that process if finalized remains to be seen. A report from the Congressional Research Service noted that DOJ could in theory decline to enact rescheduling, or start the review process all over again, for example. The post DEA Boosts Legal Production Levels For Psychedelics Like Psilocybin And DMT In Final Rule For 2026 appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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A political committee funded by major marijuana businesses has contributed an additional $1.05 million to President Donald Trump’s MAGA Inc. super PAC in the months leading up to his rescheduling order, FEC filings show. The American Rights and Reform PAC—which initially launched in 2023 under a different name, Legalize America, and lists an executive at the marijuana company Curaleaf as its treasurer—gave $1 million to the president’s political committee in July and then another $50,000 in November. That raises the PAC’s total contributions to MAGA Inc. to $2.05 million, after cannabis businesses helped to contribute an initial $1 million in the first half of the year. The latest donation came about a month before Trump signed an executive order directing the attorney general to expeditiously complete the process of moving cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). The FEC reports don’t indicate a purpose for the contributions, but the American Rights and Reform PAC has been active in its push for the incremental reform. For example, the committee released ads in March attacking former President Joe Biden’s cannabis policy record as well as the nation of Canada, promoting sometimes misleading claims about the last administration while making the case that Trump can deliver on reform. “This is an America first fight,” one ad said. “President Trump had the courage to sign Right to Try, healing American patients. Let’s do it again. Reschedule cannabis and put American first.” It seemed apparent that ads were intended to appeal directly to Trump, who has historically been driven by a desire to overshadow his political opponents and present himself as the champion for American enterprise. Marijuana Moment reached out to the PAC for comment about the latest contributions, but a representative was not immediately available. Curaleaf, whose vice president of government affairs Matt Harrell is listed as treasurer of the American Rights and Reform PAC, has also previously sought to gain Trump’s favor by donating $250,000 to his inaugural committee with a contribution filtered through a leading cannabis industry association. Meanwhile, an agriculture-focused conservative nonprofit connected to a PAC linked to the president is applauding his rescheduling order, arguing that it will “destroy” the illicit market and support seniors and military veterans who could benefit from cannabis. America First Agriculture Inc.—a group affiliated with a PAC of a similar name that previously urged Trump to follow through on a campaign pledge to reschedule marijuana—said in a new ad that the president “promised to put America first, and his word is as good as gold.” The Justice Department has not given a timeline for when a rescheduling decision might happen, and congressional researchers recently pointed out that it’s possible the agency could start the process over again, or decline to move forward all together. Notably, the organization behind the ad is associated with the similarly named America First Agriculture Action Inc., a PAC that lists Charles Gantt as its treasurer. Gantt is also the treasurer of MAGA Inc. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — Meanwhile, a coalition of Republican state attorneys general are criticizing Trump’s decision to federally reschedule marijuana, saying cannabis is “properly” classified as a Schedule I drug with no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. Last month, groups of House and Senate Republican lawmakers also sent letters urging Trump not to reschedule cannabis. Trump, however, dismissed those concerns—pointing out that an overwhelming majority of Americans support the reform and that cannabis can help people who are suffering from serious health issues, including his personal friends. The post Marijuana Industry Political Committee Gave Another $1.05 Million To Trump’s Super PAC Ahead Of Rescheduling Order, FEC Filings Show appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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Marijuana Moment: Supreme Court schedules cannabis case argument (Newsletter: January 5, 2026)
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Rescheduling could ease marijuana advertising ban; Anti-cannabis group’s plans; MA possession limit increase; NY market report Subscribe to receive Marijuana Moment’s newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. It’s the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible… Your good deed for the day: donate to an independent publisher like Marijuana Moment and ensure that as many voters as possible have access to the most in-depth cannabis reporting out there. Support our work at https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment / TOP THINGS TO KNOW The Supreme Court has scheduled oral arguments in a case challenging a federal law restricting marijuana consumers’ gun rights for March 2. The Congressional Research Service said in a new report that marijuana rescheduling would ease certain restrictions on cannabis industry advertising—but would leave in place most collateral consequences for consumers such as loss of gun rights, employment eligibility and housing opportunities. Prohibitionist group Smart Approaches to Marijuana retained former Trump administration Attorney General Bill Barr to lead a lawsuit it plans to bring if cannabis rescheduling is finalized—and the group will also file an administration petition to move marijuana back to Schedule I. Massachusetts Senate and House of Representatives leaders appointed a bicameral conference committee to negotiate differences in bills passed by either chamber to increase marijuana possession limits and restructure the Cannabis Control Commission. The New York Office of Cannabis Management published a set of year-end reports showing that consumers purchased more than $1.5 billion worth of legal marijuana products in 2025 and the number of operational dispensaries nearly doubled in the past 12 months. / FEDERAL The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected a business’s arguments that Washington State and Sacramento, California residency requirements for marijuana licenses are unconstitutional, saying that the dormant commerce clause doesn’t apply to the federally illegal industry. The Environmental Protection Agency said a public comment about emissions caused by the smoking and production of marijuana is not germane to a rule on an Arizona air quality plan. Nebraska independent Senate candidate Dan Osborn highlighted Sen. Pete Ricketts’s (R-NE) anti-marijuana stance. / STATES An Alabama senator filed a bill to tighten restrictions on hemp products. A Tennessee senator discussed her support for marijuana reform. Idaho lawmakers spoke out against President Donald Trump’s marijuana rescheduling executive order. California’s new top marijuana regulator was sworn in. Massachusetts cannabis social consumption business rules took effect. Minnesota regulators published a list of cannabis businesses that are tax delinquent. The Nevada Cannabis Compliance Board will meet on Tuesday. The Virginia Cannabis Control Authority Board of Directors will meet on Wednesday. The Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board will meet on Wednesday. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — / LOCAL The Bernalillo County, New Mexico’s sheriff removed firefighters from a helicopter unit due to a local policy allowing them to use marijuana when off duty. / INTERNATIONAL Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was arrested by U.S. officials during a raid on his home and indicted on drug and weapons charges. / SCIENCE & HEALTH A study identified “extract engineering as a rapid and efficient route to access rare cannabinoids, highlighting CBNV and Δ6a,10a-THCV as promising anticancer leads.” A study of women with chronic pelvic pain found that “CBD is considered an acceptable option, with a high proportion of surveyed women reporting current or past use to manage their symptoms.” A study found that “moderate cannabis use was not linked to elevated suicidality in clinical individuals.” / BUSINESS StickIt Technologies Inc. amended the terms of the consolidation of its common shares. Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images. The post Supreme Court schedules cannabis case argument (Newsletter: January 5, 2026) appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net -
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