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The DEA’s New Boss Holds the Keys to Weed Reform: Will He Take Action?

Published
1 day agoon

After months of silence and bureaucratic stalling, the DEA finally has a new boss: Terrance Cole, confirmed by the Senate earlier this week.
That might not sound like major weed news since it’s the DEA and all, but it is. The federal effort to reschedule cannabis — perhaps the biggest shift in US drug policy in over half a century — now flows directly through him.
Let’s break it down: Cannabis is still a Schedule I substance under federal law, the same category as heroin and LSD, meaning the government officially considers it to have no medical value and a high potential for abuse. Yes, even in 2025, after nearly half of the U.S. states have legalized cannabis for adults to buy and consume.
Rescheduling to Schedule III, alongside Tylenol with codeine and anabolic steroids, wouldn’t legalize cannabis outright. But it would mark the biggest federal policy shift since the Nixon Administration launched the War on Drugs in 1970.
Cole told lawmakers prior to his confirmation that advancing the rescheduling process, initiated by the Biden Administration but since stalled under President Trump, is one of his top priorities.
That’s the good news.
The not-so-good? He has a long track record of anti-cannabis statements and refused to give direct answers about what outcome he wants for the process. He’s playing it close to the chest.
Then came a twist: Just one day after Cole’s confirmation, the DEA’s administrative law judge overseeing the rescheduling process, John Mulrooney, announced his retirement. In a letter, he said all matters now go straight to the DEA Administrator. That’s Cole.
The cannabis industry is cautiously spinning Cole’s appointment as a win. That’s mostly because it’s been starving for any federal progress. Hearings were supposed to begin in January but quickly got bogged down by procedural fights, witness disputes, and a general lack of urgency.
So now, he has two choices:
- Finalize the rescheduling recommendation and jam it through himself — unlikely, but possible.
- Appoint a new judge and restart hearings from scratch. That would mean more delays and more dysfunction. More on that below.
If rescheduling happens, the implications are massive, especially for cannabis businesses.
The biggest shift? Eliminating IRS Code 280E, a tax rule that bars cannabis operators from deducting normal expenses like payroll, rent, and office supplies. That rule has gutted balance sheets and pushed even profitable companies into the red.
Rescheduling could also unlock access to banking, ease mergers and acquisitions, and possibly even allow U.S. cannabis firms to list on major stock exchanges — though it’s unclear if Nasdaq or NYSE would permit that under Schedule III.
For social equity operators, it could be a lifeline. States like New York and Illinois established these licensing programs to give entrepreneurs harmed by the War on Drugs a first crack at the newly legal market. But the lack of federal reform and banking access has left many undercapitalized, buried in debt, and unable to open. New investment and lower capital costs could give them some breathing room.
But here’s the rub: Many grassroots advocates worry Schedule III could cement the dominance of deep-pocketed multistate operators like Curaleaf and Green Thumb Industries that cultivate and sell cannabis in multiple states. These companies already have the compliance teams, legal firepower, and capital to navigate federal ambiguity — and now, potentially, tax relief too.
Rescheduling doesn’t legalize cannabis. It doesn’t expunge records. And it technically wouldn’t stop federal agencies from hassling state-legal operators if they wanted to. It just makes the math easier — for the businesses that are already surviving.
Trump has political reasons to move on cannabis reform. He backed rescheduling during the campaign — meaning it would be a fulfilled campaign promise — and it could distract from Epstein file fallout and DOJ scandals. More importantly, he’s hemorrhaging Gen Z support, and they overwhelmingly back cannabis reform.
It also gives Trump a way to split the difference in his big-tent party. It’s not full legalization (which could trigger backlash from the religious Ron DeSantis/Mike Johnson wing), but it is a policy win that helps small American businesses, plays well with young voters, and looks like reform and a broadly popular issue without going all the way.
It’s a politically useful half-measure. But in this administration, it might be the best we get. Now that Judge Mulrooney’s out, the ball is squarely in Cole’s court.
Will he push it through? Or slow-walk it into oblivion? The industry’s watching. Closely.
Editor’s note: Check out more of Jeremy’s work over at Cultivated — one of our favorite sources for smart, nuanced cannabis coverage.
Photo by Thom Milkovic on Unsplash

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Kentucky Governor Urges Trump To Oppose Bill Blocking Marijuana Rescheduling That’s Advancing In Congress

Published
58 minutes agoon
July 25, 2025
The governor of Kentucky is calling on President Donald Trump to reject congressional spending bill provisions that would prevent the Justice Department from rescheduling marijuana.
In a letter sent to Trump this week, Gov. Andy Beshear (D) 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.”
Rescheduling “is just common sense,” the governor said. “Over 40 states now have medical marijuana programs. Republicans and Democrats overwhelmingly agree on this issue, including in Kentucky, where you won a vast majority of the vote in 2016, 2020 and 2024, and where a Republican supermajority passed legislation legalizing medical marijuana in 2023—legislation that I signed into law. The federal government has fallen far behind on this issue and finally needs to catch up.”
Gov. Andy Beshear sent a letter to President Donald Trump this week asking the President to oppose congressional appropriations language that would block the DEA from rescheduling marijuana under the Controlled Substances Act.
Read more: https://t.co/TJj2fiTuxK pic.twitter.com/C1f63rkpYT
— Governor Andy Beshear (@GovAndyBeshear) July 25, 2025
He referenced a September 2024 comment from Trump where the then-candidate said that, under his administration, “we will continue to focus on research to unlock the medical uses of marijuana to a Schedule 3 drug, and work with Congress to pass common sense laws.”
“Now, it is time to make good on your promises to the American people.”
Referencing language included in a House committee-approved bill that would bar DOJ from rescheduling cannabis, Beshear said “this is not a common-sense law.”
“It stops a process that is already underway to accomplish a policy end that is overwhelmingly supported by the medical and scientific communities as well as the American people of every political party,” he said. “Congress should not take the decision-making process out of the hands of medical and scientific experts when they don’t like the results.”
“I hope that your action on this issue matches the promises you made to the American people to support rescheduling and work with Congress to ensure laws passed are truly ‘common sense,’” the governor said. “Again, I urge you to oppose the House Appropriations Committee’s proposed language to block the DEA from rescheduling marijuana.”
Here’s the text of the provision Beshear is asking the president to oppose:
“SEC. 607. None of the funds appropriated or other wise made available by this Act may be used to reschedule marijuana (as such term is defined in section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802)) or to remove marijuana from the schedules established under section 202 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 812).”
Regardless of the appropriations bill, the rescheduling process is currently sitting in limbo—especially since the DEA judge overseeing the process has now announced he’ll be retiring at the end of the month, leaving the issue to newly confirmed DEA Administrator Terrance Cole.
Notably, while Cole has said that examining the rescheduling proposal would be “one of my first priorities” if he was confirmed for the role, he has refused to say what he wants the result to be and has in the past made comments expressing concerns about the health effects of cannabis.
In May, a Senate committee advanced the nomination of Cole to become DEA administrator amid the ongoing review of the marijuana rescheduling proposal that he has so far refused to commit to enacting.
Cole—who has previously voiced concerns about the dangers of marijuana and linked its use to higher suicide risk among youth—said in response to senators’ written questions that he would “give the matter careful consideration after consulting with appropriate personnel within the Drug Enforcement Administration, familiarizing myself with the current status of the regulatory process, and reviewing all relevant information.”
Meanwhile, earlier this month, DEA again notified DEA Administrative Law Judge John Mulrooney that the marijuana rescheduling process remains stalled under the Trump administration.
It’s been six months since Mulrooney temporarily paused hearings on a proposal to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the CSA that was initiated under the Biden administration. And in a joint report to the judge submitted on Monday, DEA attorneys and rescheduling proponents said they’re still at an impasse.
Beshear, meanwhile, has been focused on state-level cannabis reform developments over recent years.
He recently touted “another milestone” in the state’s forthcoming medical marijuana program, with a licensed cultivator producing “the first medical cannabis inventory in Kentucky history.”
The governor previewed the development late last month, stating that he expected to see medical marijuana growers “putting seed in the ground really soon,” while projecting that patients will have access to cannabis before the year’s end.

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

The kids are foul mouth, opinionated, and always on point…and they love a little green plant
Since its debut in 1997, South Park has never shied away from taboo topics, and marijuana has been one of its most enduring themes. From early jokes about stoners to full-blown cannabis entrepreneurship, the evolution of weed in South Park mirrors shifting cultural attitudes—and reflects the creators’ own evolving stance.
RELATED: Why More Software Programmers Are Choosing To Smoke Weed
The show’s co-creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, are no strangers to controversy. But when it comes to cannabis, they’ve played both sides of the joint: poking fun at stoner culture while also embracing marijuana legalization as a symbol of personal freedom.
In the early seasons, cannabis was mostly a background gag. Randy Marsh, Stan’s dad, occasionally referenced drug use, but weed wasn’t a focal point. That changed dramatically in Season 23 with the introduction of Tegridy Farms—a fictional marijuana business Randy starts to recapture his lost sense of integrity (“tegridy”).
The Tegridy Farms storyline, which spans multiple seasons, is satire at its best: equal parts critique of corporate cannabis, commentary on the commodification of wellness, and a portrait of midlife crisis. As Randy evolves into a weed mogul, South Park explores everything from THC-infused products to international cannabis trade.
For Parker and Stone, Tegridy Farms is more than a plot device—it’s a reflection of how far cannabis has come in mainstream America. In interviews, both creators have acknowledged they support legalization and view the war on drugs as a failure. “We always thought it was ridiculous,” Stone said in a 2020 interview. “People getting locked up for something safer than alcohol? It never made sense.”
The irony, of course, is that South Park itself has grown up with its audience. Millennials who watched the show in middle school are now adults—many with mortgages, careers, and legal weed in their states. The cannabis storylines, once rebellious, now resonate as social satire for a generation navigating late-stage capitalism and ever-shifting norms.
RELATED: The Science Behind Why Music Sounds So Much Better When You’re High
South Park’s weed content also plays well with search engines. From “Tegridy Farms” memes to fan theories about Randy’s descent into madness, marijuana-themed episodes drive traffic and engagement. It’s smart business—and smart commentary.
Whether it’s lampooning hemp marketing or making fun of anti-pot hysteria, South Park keeps it blunt: weed is part of the culture now. And if there’s one thing Parker and Stone have always understood, it’s how to make culture laugh at itself.

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

Nuestro contenido en español vive en El Planteo. Pronto, más novedades.
The post Lo Más Reciente de High Times en Español first appeared on High Times.

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

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