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New Republican National Committee Chairman Supports Marijuana Legalization

Published
3 weeks agoon

The Republican National Committee has a new leader who supports legalizing marijuana and who has discussed his own use of cannabis products.
Florida state Sen. Joe Gruters (R), who campaigned for a cannabis legalization initiative on his state’s ballot last year, was elected chairman of the RNC at a party meeting in Atlanta on Friday.
President Donald Trump officially endorsed Gruters for the position in a lengthy social media post last month in which he also endorsed outgoing RNC Chairman Michael Whatley in his bid for a U.S. Senate seat representing North Carolina.
In a speech after winning the vote on Friday in which he ran unopposed, Gruters said that “today is not about one person, it is about our mission.”
“The midterms are ahead, where we must expand our majority in the House and the Senate and continue electing Republicans nationwide,” he said. “And then we march forward toward the presidential election, where the stakes could not be higher.”
As RPOF Chair, @JoeGruters helped turn Florida deep red and delivered historic Republican victories. Now as @GOP Chairman, he’ll take that winning formula nationwide.
Congratulations, Chairman. Florida leads! pic.twitter.com/1hGof6HrQs
— Florida GOP (@FloridaGOP) August 22, 2025
Notably, Trump had also endorsed Gruters to be Florida’s chief financial officer, but Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) instead appointed state Sen. Blaise Ingoglia (R) to fill the role until the next election.
The governor was critical of Gruters’s advocacy for marijuana legalization through last year’s Amendment 3, an industry-backed initiative that would have legalized and regulated cannabis for adults in the state.
Ultimately, Amendment 3 failed to reach the necessary 60 percent threshold for passage under state law, though it received a majority of the statewide vote.
“Gruters sided with the mega-weed company Trulieve and was joining with liberal Democrats to try to do it,” DeSantis said at a press event, “so his record is contrary to what we told the voters we’d do.”
DeSantis told reporters at the time that “if George Washington rose from the dead and came back and tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘Will you appoint Joe Gruters CFO?’ My response would be: ‘No, I can’t do that.’”
DeSantis was a staunch opponent of Amendment 3, but Trump notably supported it. Ahead of endorsing the measure, then-candidate Trump met with Gruters and, separately, Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers.
“We discussed the policy at length. Here in Florida, it’s common sense,” Gruters said last fall. “President Trump is certainly trying to make inroads with the younger demographics, where I think a lot of these voters—certainly undecided ones—where this can make a big difference. And I think that certainly had a role.”
Gruters told Marijuana Moment at the time that there were also “a lot of people that were trying to talk [Trump] out of saying anything nice” about legalization.
“Like any major policy decision, he’s going to get input from lots of people,” the state senator said, “but I’m thankful to be in the circle where I could offer my opinion, and I think he values it.”
Gruters appeared in a TV ad for the cannabis campaign.
“Florida is the freest state in America, but we still have outdated marijuana laws obstructing that freedom,” he said in the spot. “Amendment 3 would give adults back that freedom and give Florida a chance to legalize marijuana responsibly. Florida is the only state that can do this right from the right. Vote ‘yes’ on Amendment 3.”
In addition to backing last year’s Amendment 3, Gruters also sponsored additional marijuana reform bills earlier this year.
SB 546 would have allowed state-registered medical marijuana patients to grow up to two cannabis plants per household for their own use. SB 552 would have added to the state’s list of qualifying medical marijuana conditions those “for which a patient has been prescribed an opioid drug” and called on regulators to make rules allowing out-of-state patients to access Florida’s medical marijuana program.
In February, Gruters said on a podcast that there’s “not a lot of interest in my Republican colleagues to move anything related to marijuana whatsoever.”
In the interview, the senator likened home cannabis cultivation to home beer brewing or winemaking.
“Florida is a freedom state. I believe in freedom,” he said. “If you really want to do that stuff, and you want to take the time, then by all means go and do it, as long as you do it in a regulated way to where nobody else is getting hurt and you’re taking responsibility.”
Gruters also revealed that on his birthday a few years ago, while vacationing in Las Vegas with his wife, the couple decided to try some infused gummies, he said.
“All I’ll say is, I thought everybody was looking at me,” the lawmaker recalled. “I was very thirsty, and I told my wife, I said, ‘You’ve got to get me back to our hotel room quick!”
While Trump has welcomed into his administration a number of marijuana legalization skeptics, his support for Gruters to lead the national GOP could potentially elevate cannabis reform as a priority for Republican Party officials.
While more and more Republican voters in recent years have expressed support for legalization in polls, GOP leadership has largely remained opposed.
A survey conducted by a Republican pollster affiliated with Trump that was released in April found that a majority of Republicans back a variety of cannabis reforms, including rescheduling. And, notably, they’re even more supportive of allowing states to legalize marijuana without federal interference compared to the average voter.
While DeSantis’s comments on Amendment 3 framed the legalization measure as a partisan issue, the campaign in fact divided Republicans—including DeSantis and Trump.
While the president threw his support behind legalization, saying it would be “very good” for the state, DeSantis aggressively campaigned against it, telling constituents that the measure was written by self-interested marijuana companies in an effort to corner the market. He also repeatedly argued that it would upend Florida culture, filling the streets with the smell of cannabis smoke and turning the state into something closer to California, Colorado or New York.
The governor also faced allegations of weaponizing state departments to push anti-legalization narratives through various advertisements—prompting one Democratic state senator to sue over what he claimed was an unconstitutional appropriation of tax dollars. A Florida judge later dismissed that lawsuit.
Ultimately, Amendment 3 failed to reach the necessary 60 percent threshold for passage under state law, though it received a majority of the statewide vote. Trump’s endorsement evidently had little effect, according to a poll released in the wake of the election, despite earlier predictions by associates like Roger Stone that his blessing would “guarantee victory.”

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Rhode Island Opens Applications for 24 Adult-Use Dispensary Licenses

Published
38 minutes agoon
September 15, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – WARWICK, R.I., Sept. 12, 2025 – The Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) opened the application period for adult-use cannabis retail licenses, marking the beginning of the largest expansion to Rhode Island’s cannabis industry. The commission is authorized under the Rhode Island Cannabis Act to license up to 24 retail establishments statewide, divided equally across six geographic zones, making this announcement a defining moment in shaping the state’s cannabis marketplace.
“Today’s announcement represents years of work, collaboration and preparation to ensure Rhode Island has a cannabis marketplace that is safe, transparent, and equitable,” CCC Chairperson Kim Ahern said. “The release of this application and launch of our submission portal is not only about opening doors for businesses but about creating meaningful opportunities for Rhode Islanders while keeping public health and public safety at the center of everything we do.”
With only 24 retail licenses available statewide, the launch of the application process is expected to draw significant interest from prospective applicants. Together with the Social Equity Applicant Status Certification Portal, which opened in August, the application process reflects the CCC’s deliberate steps toward building a cannabis industry that prioritizes economic opportunity, equity and fairness in Rhode Island.
“Rhode Island’s cannabis market is poised for growth, and this application is helping us do exactly that,” Gov. Dan McKee said. “As we expand the cannabis industry here in the Ocean State, we’re opening the doors to new investment, new good-paying jobs, and new opportunities for our economy.”
Adult-use retail licenses will authorize sales of cannabis products to adults 21 and older. By releasing the application and opening the submission portal simultaneously, the commission is providing applicants with a transparent process while reinforcing its commitment to accountability and access.
“Today’s release of the adult-use retail license application reflects the commission’s commitment to equity and accountability,” Commissioner Layi Oduyingbo said. “This framework provides applicants with the information they need while reinforcing our responsibility to safeguard public health and consumer safety.”
Commissioner Robert Jacquard said, “The commission aims to make this application process as business-friendly as possible, while upholding standards that will protect public health.”
To ensure the process is fair and accessible, the commission and Cannabis Office will provide technical assistance resources and ongoing guidance for prospective applicants. Applications will be accepted until 4 p.m. on Dec. 29, 2025.
“This is a milestone that reflects the dedication and perseverance of so many people,” Cannabis Office Administrator Michelle Reddish said. “From lawmakers and advocates to community members and our dedicated staff, countless individuals have helped build the foundation for this moment. By publishing the application today, we are taking a historic step toward building a cannabis marketplace that serves consumers, supports equity and advances public health in Rhode Island.”
The adult-use retail license application is available on the commission’s website at www.ccc.ri.gov/auapp.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Can LSD Battle Anxiety? The Answer Is Yes, According to Science

Published
2 hours agoon
September 15, 2025
Hands down, one of the drugs that has received the worst press in the decades marked by the War on Drugs has been LSD. All sorts of things have been said about this molecule: that it drives you crazy, or suicidal, that it remains stored in your body forever, that it irreparably damages the brain… Fortunately, we now have professionals investigating the matter, with a scientific perspective rather than a moralistic or prohibitionist one.
One of the latest findings on the subject seems to directly contradict one of the great myths about LSD: instead of leading to insanity, this compound could reduce anxiety. This is according to a study by Mind Medicine (MindMed) Inc., a biopharmaceutical company that has been researching psychedelic compounds for mental health for many years. While the preliminary results were released in 2022, they were officially published this month in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
This isn’t the first time MindMed has embarked on studying this topic: it had already achieved positive results with LSD for anxiety on another occasion. In fact, the FDA granted Breakthrough Therapy designation for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) to the company’s proprietary drug candidate, MM120, a pharmacologically optimized formulation of LSD.
LSD and Anxiety: What the MindMed Study Says
The company conducted a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2b study at 22 outpatient psychiatric research centers in the US. The effects of a single dose of MM120 (lysergide D-tartrate, LSD) were analyzed in 198 adults with moderate to severe generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Participants experienced sustained improvements in their condition over the 12-week observation period.
According to the company’s press release, this is the first randomized, placebo-controlled trial evaluating a single treatment at four dose levels (25, 50, 100, or 200 µg), without any psychotherapeutic intervention.
The optimal dose of MM120 was determined at 100 µg. This demonstrated a “clinically and statistically significant improvement vs. placebo, and a 65% clinical response rate and 48% clinical remission rate” at the end of the experiment.
Likewise, tolerance to the medication was positive, with the expected adverse effects of an LSD experience remaining mild to moderate and lasting only one day.
During the study, participants receiving medication for their condition had to discontinue such treatment under the supervision of the study professionals. Furthermore, on the day of dosing, they were offered “standardized music and eyeshades and could lie down, move freely around the room, read, write, or draw.” It should be noted that the study protocol explicitly prohibited participation in psychotherapy.
Dr. Maurizio Fava, one of the study’s authors, stated that “this study is a true turning point in the field of psychiatry… For the first time, LSD has been studied with modern scientific rigor, and the results are both clinically meaningful and potentially paradigm-shifting for the treatment of GAD. GAD affects 26 million adults in the U.S., yet no new medications have been approved since 2007—and first-line treatments fail 50% of patients.”
Thus, scientific innovation continues to advance against the willful ignorance of prohibitionists, working tirelessly to ensure patients have access to the relief that traditional therapies fail to provide.
This article was first published on El Planteo.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Kentucky Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Should Be Stocked With Products Ready For Sale By Next Month, Top State Official Says

Published
3 hours agoon
September 15, 2025
Kentucky’s top medical marijuana regulator said he expects that dispensary shelves will be stocked with products ready for sale to patients by next month.
Two of the state’s 16 medical cannabis cultivators are now operational, according to Cannon Armstrong, executive director of Kentucky’s Office of Medical Cannabis (OMC).
“If everything goes according to plan for them, I think that they’ll have medical cannabis that will be ready to harvest and be put on the shelf, you know, by October,” he told Spectrum News 1. “So we’re moving and we’re finally getting to a point where we’re, these patients are going to receive this medication sooner than later.”
Armstrong predicted that the first sales will likely occur at a dispensary in Beaver Dam called The Post.
“I think you’re going to see the first products out there based upon just how it’s shaken out,” he said. “You know, someone may step up their timeline and may get out there before that or get product from there and place it somewhere else in the state.”
As of now, OMC has approved more than 19,000 patients certifications, Armstrong said.
He added that medical cannabis supplies should be relatively scarce as the market first launches, and said that as a result initial prices will be higher than they eventually will be.
Earlier this month, Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said he thought medical marijuana would be available to Kentucky patients by the end of 2025.
“The medical marijuana program is moving forward,” he said at a press briefing at the time.
“I think most of our dispensaries now have their home address [and] are set about where they’re going to be, but [for] some of the inspections that have to happen in dispensaries, they have to have product that’s there,” he said. “So I do believe they’ll be operating before the end of the year.”
Those comments came roughly a month after the governor announced that the state’s first medical cannabis dispensary has officially been approved for operations, calling it “another step forward as we work to ensure Kentuckians with serious medical conditions have access to the medicine they need and deserve.
He previously touted an earlier “milestone” in the state’s forthcoming medical marijuana program, with a licensed cultivator producing “the first medical cannabis inventory in Kentucky history.”
Beshear’s office has said that other cannabis licensees, including processors and testing labs, are expected to become operational soon.
In July, Beshear sent a letter to President Donald Trump, urging him to reject congressional spending bill provisions that would prevent the Justice Department from rescheduling marijuana.
In the letter to the president, he emphasized that a pending proposal to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) is something “you supported in your presidential campaign.”
“That process should be allowed to play out. Americans deserve leadership that won’t move the goalposts on them in the middle of the game,” Beshear said, noting that he was among the tens of thousands who submitted public comments in favor of the reform after it was initiated under the Biden administration, “demonstrating broad public interest in rescheduling.”
“I joined that effort because this is about helping people. Rescheduling would provide suffering patients the relief they need,” the governor said. “It would ensure communities are safer—because legal medical products reduce the illicit market. It would provide new, meaningful research on health benefits.”
Beshear also mentioned a letter to DEA he signed onto last year urging rescheduling, “because the jury is no longer out on marijuana. It has medical benefits.”
Back on the state level, the governor recently said he acknowledges that “it’s taken longer than we would have liked” to stand up the industry since he signed medical marijuana legalization into law in 2023.
In recognition of that delayed implementation, he recently signed an executive order to waive renewal fees for patients who get their cards this year so that they don’t get charged again before retailers open. And another order he signed providing protections for qualified patients who obtain medical marijuana outside of Kentucky “will stay in place.”
Beshear separately announced in May that the state has launched a new online directory that lets people see where medical cannabis dispensaries will be opening near them.
He emphasized that the state has been working to deliver access to patients “at the earliest possible date,” and that involved expediting the licensing process. The governor in January also ceremonially awarded the commonwealth’s first medical marijuana cards.
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Meanwhile, the governor sent a letter to Kentucky’s congressional delegation in January, “urging them to take decisive action to protect the constitutional rights of our law abiding medical cannabis patients” by repealing the federal ban on gun possession by people who use marijuana.
That came after bipartisan Kentucky senators filed legislation that similarly called on the state’s federal representatives to take corrective action, which Beshear said he supports but would like to see even more sweeping change on the federal level.
The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) warned Kentucky residents late last year that, if they choose to participate in the state’s medical marijuana program, they will be prohibited from buying or possessing firearms under federal law.
As far as the implementation of the state’s medical cannabis law goes, Beshear said in his State of the Commonwealth address in January that patients will have access to cannabis sometime “this year.” He also later shared tips for patients to find a doctor and get registered to participate in the cannabis program.
Health practitioners have been able to start assessing patients for recommendations since the beginning of December.
While there currently aren’t any up-and-running dispensaries available to patients, Beshear has further affirmed that an executive order he signed in 2023 will stay in effect in the interim, protecting patients who possess medical cannabis purchased at out-of-state licensed retailers.
During last year’s November election, Kentucky also saw more than 100 cities and counties approve local ordinances to allow medical cannabis businesses in their jurisdictions. The governor said the election results demonstrate that “the jury is no longer out” on the issue that is clearly supported by voters across partisan and geographical lines.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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