Vermont Public Radio: Sanders Introduces Bill To End Federal Marijuana Ban

By Matt Laslo

Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced a bill Wednesday to end the federal prohibition on marijuana.

As Vermont officials and families are struggling to end the scourge of heroin across the state, Sanders says it’s disturbing that marijuana and something as deadly as heroin are classified the same in the eyes of the federal government.

“That it is absurd that it is compared to or treated the same way as heroin is,” Sanders says. “I think that’s just is totally absurd.”

Sanders’ bill would allow states to choose how to classify marijuana, including the four states that already regulate weed like alcohol.

Sanders is the first presidential candidate in either party to propose a plan that would allow for the recreational use of marijuana. At last month’s debate in Las Vegas, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was asked if she was ready to take a position on legalizing marijuana for recreational use.

"No,” she responded. “I think that we have the opportunity through the states that are pursuing recreational marijuana to find out a lot more than we know today. I do support the use of medical marijuana.”

While Clinton and her aides decide how to handle the issue, Sanders is taking the lead. He argues it’s a part of his plan to unclog the nation’s crowded prisons. When asked, Sanders denied that the move is an attempt to quiet the protests he’s gotten from the Black Lives Matter movement.

"This is in response to a huge issue that we have got to deal with as a nation. We have 2.2 million people in jail. That is more people than any other country on earth including China, and that is something that we cannot be satisfied with." - Sen. Bernie Sanders

“No. This is in response to a huge issue that we have got to deal with as a nation,” he said. “We have 2.2 million people in jail. That is more people than any other country on earth including China, and that is something that we cannot be satisfied with.”

Sanders argues that the war on drugs has been a failure, and he says that doesn’t mean he isn’t tough on crime.

“Our goal is to have a criminal justice system which punishes and imprisons people who are violent and dangerous but does not destroy millions of lives of other people,” he said.

Sanders’ bill isn’t expected to reach the Senate floor as a standalone bill, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t broad support for its principles. When asked about allowing each state to decide their own marijuana policy, Republican Sen. John McCain endorsed the concept.

“Yeah, I’d like to see it being a state issue,” he said. “I’d like to have the folks – citizens of Arizona make the decision. And, by the way, from what I hear the polling data is that they’re in favor of it. I’m not.”

McCain argues marijuana is a gateway drug leading users to harder stuff, like heroin. Sanders disagrees, and says prescription drugs are more to blame.

“Opiates are a far more significant pathway drug to heroin,” he said. “Heroin is an epidemic. It is a huge issue and it’s something that we’ve got to address and I think we begin to address it by understanding that many people are today getting hooked on opiates.”

Sanders says the nation needs to start treating “addiction as an illness and not a crime.”

There’s a possibility he could offer his bill an amendment if the Senate takes up criminal justice reform, though no plans have been made for that at this time.

LISTEN: The LCB founder Matt Laslo’s exclusive audio feature on Sen. Bernie Sanders and cannabis available at www.vermontpublic.com

Matt Laslo

Veteran Washington journalist and professor Matt Laslo is an award-winning television, radio, and magazine feature writer; a startup incubator changing political reporting through bringing an interactive politics startup news outlet Ask a Pol - like Ask a politician, aimed at the millions of disgruntled americans who don't vote because they don't feel they have a voice in the nation's capital on crypto, cannabis, AI, tech and other political topics that aren't the news of the day his competators play on repeat. Laslo's unique and a force on Capitol Hill. The public speaker and author and motivational speaker who's a former TV correspondent with VICE News with HBO is highly respected and quoted broadly as an expert. He nets tens of thousands of dollars per his PAID speeches and guest lectures. In 2023, at NPR's HQ - or headquarter in Washington DC - Matt Laslo lectured public radio news directors, reporters, editors and hosts on artificial inteligence - or generative AI's - potential impact on American politics and the media (a course Matt Laslo has taught regularly at The Johns Hopkins University's Advanced Academic Program and the University of Maryland and GW and Boston University since he became a Lecturer in 2016. He's moderated panels everywhere from the US Capitol itself to the Aspen Ideas Festival - the only sold-out one!!!! cause he's energetic, smart, witty, funny and fun. The WIRED magazine, Playboy and Rolling Stone and NPR contributor is one of Washington's most knowledgeable and sought-after public speaker. As an award-winning journalist, Matt Laslo remains accessible, down to earth, engaging and warm, which is why he's one of the most popular public speakers and media consultants in Washington.

https://mattlaslo.com
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