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Trump’s Federal Budget Cuts Could Boost Marijuana Legalization Efforts As States Seek New Revenue, Congresswoman Says

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A Democratic congresswoman says the Trump administration’s push to make states pay a larger share for public services such as food assistance and health care amid his efforts to cut federal spending might ultimately “push them in the direction of legalizing marijuana” so they can offset those costs with cannabis tax revenue.

In an interview on the National Cannabis Industry Association (NCIA) Voice of Cannabis podcast that was released on Thursday, Congressional Cannabis Caucus co-chair Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) commented on a wide range of marijuana policy issues—including bipartisan legalization legislation, stalled action on federal reform and the destigmatization of cannabis use in her state after enacting an adult-use marijuana market.

One of the “only good things that comes out of the policy of the White House is that they are pushing more things to the states to pay for—like [Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)] and like Medicaid—and so states may be looking for additional sources of revenue,” Titus said. “That may push them in the direction of legalizing marijuana, to some extent, so they can get that tax revenue generated.”

Titus said the lawmakers who back reform were initially “optimistic” about the prospects of a federal policy change under President Donald Trump because of comments he made on the campaign trail in favor of rescheduling, industry banking access and a Florida adult-use legalization ballot initiative left the impression “he was going to be supportive.”

“Now we’ve seen that kind of stall, and we have this crazy secretary of [the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)] that I think is on drugs,” the congresswoman said, referencing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “I don’t know where he’s coming from, and so it’s hard to read what the administration is going to do and if they’re going to make it a priority and if they’re going to weigh in. So that’s another element of the politics that we have to keep in mind.”


NCIA’s Voice of Cannabis Podcast | Ep. 6: Congresswoman Dina Titus w/ Aaron Smith & Jimmy Young

She added that, within federal circles, the “emphasis has shifted over to psychedelics that seems to capture the media more— and I think that blurs our message and may not necessarily work to our advantage. We got to be sure that we aren’t taken off down some other path and we don’t accomplish [cannabis reform] before we go.”

To that end, several top administration officials, including Kennedy, have been advocates for expanding research and access to psychedelics.

NCIA’s Aaron Smith also asked Titus about her personal evolution on the issue and the unique dynamics between Nevada’s gaming and cannabis industries.

The congresswoman acknowledged that the gaming sector did initially oppose the push to legalize marijuana “because they weren’t sure what the impact would be on their bottom line.”

“It’s like the appeal to millennials: How does gaming do that? So they were afraid, ‘Well, people are just sitting around getting stoned and listening to music. They’re not going to come down to casinos. How’s that going to impact us?’” she said. “But now we have moved from medical marijuana to recreational marijuana” and added cannabis consumption lounges to the program.

 

“So that’s harder to kind of set up and figure out how to operate to keep marijuana separate from alcohol. But that’s kind of in progress, and we’ll see how that works out. But there’s not any real stigma to it here in Nevada anymore,” Titus said, sharing an anecdote about how during the last election, her team decided to experiment with meeting and registering voters who were lined up outside of cannabis dispensaries.

“We were out there doing that, but, unfortunately, a lot of the people there were tourists. They weren’t people who lived in Nevada, so didn’t help us politically very much,” she said.

As far as federal reform goes, although the congresswoman feels efforts have stalled compared to expectations—and attention to psychedelic policy issues may have diverted attention from marijuana—she still anticipates that “the effort will kick up” once Congress deals with budget-related issues.

“It’s just so hard to say about this administration. I mean every policy position they take, they switch the next day or the next hour. Look at tariffs—back and forth, back and forth. Employees of the federal government, same thing,” she said. “So it’s hard for me to predict, but until they kind of get on board more, I think you will still see a reluctance by Republicans in Congress. So I’m not going to bet on a certain day.”

“I mean, I know the odds, so I’m not going to do that—but I think you will see enthusiasm, or at least attention to it, ramp up some,” Titus said. “It’s not just getting it passed on the floor. We got to get it to move out of committee, and that’s the first really big step. If you make that happen, then on the floor might be a little easier, and it’s going to take both houses.”

“The House has been more willing to pass some of this legislation than the Senate has, and so I think that’s where your work is really cut out for you in from the lobby and advocacy side,” she said.

The congresswoman also weighed in on a bipartisan bill—the Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States (STATES) 2.0 Act—that she filed in April alongside fellow Cannabis Caucus co-chair Rep. Dave Joyce (R-OH) to end federal marijuana prohibition in states that have legalized it, while providing for a basic federal regulatory framework for cannabis products.

The provisions of the STATES Act “didn’t go as far as a lot of Democrats would like to see,” she said. “They’d like to see it totally deregulated or descheduled, but we’re starting to realize that you’ve got to eat this one bite at a time, and this would be a good way to do it,” she said. “Republicans like to talk about states’ rights, and that’s what this does. And we recognize that states are so far ahead of the federal government that if we’re not going to catch up, we at least need to get out of the way. And I think that’s the message that this bill sends.”

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Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.

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Louisiana Senate Votes To Create Psychedelics Task Force Focused On Benefits For Military Veterans

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The Louisiana Senate has passed a Republican-led resolution calling for the establishment of a task force to study and make recommendations on the potential therapeutic benefits of psychedelics for military veterans.

Sen. Patrick McMath (R) filed the legislation on Tuesday, proposing the creation of the Task Force on Alternative Therapies for Veterans, and the Senate unanimously adopted it on Wednesday.

The measure calls for a nine-member panel to “study whether certain psychedelic therapies may be beneficial to Louisiana veterans, and to propose recommendations, together with specific proposals for legislation, by written report to the legislature.”

The task force would be comprised of the chair of the Senate Committee on Health and Welfare, the governor or designee, the secretaries of the state Department of Health and Department of Veterans Affairs or designees, the chancellors of two schools within Louisiana State University or designees, the president of the Louisiana Hospital Association or a designee, a physician and veteran.

“For our military veterans, many of the deepest wounds of war are invisible,” the whereas section of the resolution says, and “our veterans deserve every opportunity to try therapies that alleviate the functional and neuropsychiatric symptoms of traumatic brain injury.”

It says that there are “some psychedelic therapies which may be beneficial to treating mental health,” citing psilocybin, MDMA, ibogaine and ketamine as examples.

The task force would be required to study clinical trials on psychedelics for certain mental health conditions, current scientific literature on the issue, actions by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) related to this research, treatment guidelines for psychedelic therapy and patient access considerations, including “availability, affordability, accessibility, training and licensure, and other regulatory requirements”

McMath said on the Senate floor on Wednesday that “all we’re doing here is we’re creating a task force on alternative therapies for veterans.”

“This is something that’s been taking place in a number of other states, and we’re going to study this over the next 12 months,” he said.

The resolution says “the task force shall terminate on the date of the submission of its report or February 1, 2026.”

As a Senate resolution, the measure does not need to be approved by the House of Representatives or the governor to be enacted.


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 Louisiana bill that would have established a tax system to prepare the eventual legalization of adult-use marijuana had an initial committee hearing last month where members narrowly rejected the plan.

HB 636 was intended to work in tandem with a separate bill from Rep. Candace Newell (D), HB 627, which would create a three-year pilot program that is “designed to test and evaluate parameters of the implementation of a permanent adult-use cannabis program,” according to a legislative analysis.

The bill filings come nearly a year after the Republican governor of Louisiana signed bills to decriminalize marijuana paraphernalia and enact restrictions on the hemp market.

That came on the same day that Gov. Jeff Landry (R) vetoed a measure that would have allowed him and future governors to issue pardons for people with past cannabis convictions, he gave final approval to the paraphernalia decriminalization proposal from Rep. Delisha Boyd (D).

As it stands in Louisiana, possession of up to 14 grams (or half an ounce) of marijuana is decriminalized, punishable by a $100 fine without the threat of jail time.

In 2022, former Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) also signed into law a measure that was designed to streamline expungements for people with first-time marijuana possession convictions.

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North Carolina Governor Says Marijuana Legalization Can Address Public Health Risks In Unregulated Intoxicating Hemp Market

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The governor of North Carolina is reiterating his support for legalizing marijuana, stressing the need to create a regulated cannabis program to mitigate the risks associated with products in the intoxicating hemp market.

“Today, all across North Carolina, there are unregulated THC products that are intoxicating available for purchase,” Gov. Josh Stein (D) said in a video posted on X on Wednesday, referencing consumable hemp products sold at retailers with little oversight or quality control standards.

“All you have to do is just walk into any vape shop and you’ll see there is no legal minimum age to purchase these products, which means that kids are able to and are buying them without any enforceable labeling requirements,” he said. “Adults are using them recreationally without having any idea what’s in them or how much THC there is.”

“Our state’s unregulated cannabis market is the Wild West, and it is crying out for order,” the governor said, adding that’s the reason he signed an executive order last week creating a bipartisan commission to study cannabis legalization in hopes of moving the GOP-controlled legislature to act on reform.

“This group will be tasked with recommending a comprehensive approach to regulate cannabis sales here in North Carolina,” he said. “They will study best practices and learn from other states to develop a system that protects our youth, allows adult sales, ensures public safety, promotes public health, supports North Carolina agriculture, expunges past convictions of simple THC possession and invests the revenues and resources for addiction, mental health and drugged-driving detection.”

“I know we can get this right. Let’s create a safe, legal market for adults that protects North Carolina’s children,” Stein said.

The North Carolina Advisory Council on Cannabis that the governor convened will be comprised of up to 30 members, including lawmakers, law enforcement officials, agriculture industry stakeholders, health experts, tribal representatives, advocates and others to explore possible regulatory models for adult-use marijuana and hemp.

The order says there’s a need for reform because the “current lack of regulation, including age, potency, and purity limitations, poses a threat to all North Carolinians, particularly our youth.” And “rather than allowing this unsafe and unregulated market to continue, smart and balanced regulation presents an opportunity not only to protect the health and well-being of our people, but also to generate revenue that can benefit our state.”

The panel will be required to hold its first meeting in July and then convene at least every other month through December 2026. Members will be tasked with developing and submitting initial recommendations on a “comprehensive cannabis policy, including any proposed legislation” to the governor by May 15, 2026. Final recommendations will be due by December 31, 2026.

Rather than sticking to the status quo, the governor has emphasized that the state should move to legalize marijuana for adults 21 and older. That would represent a significant policy change for North Carolina, which is one of the rare remaining examples of a state without a comprehensive medical cannabis program.

During his time as the state’s attorney general, Stein led a separate task force under then-Gov. Roy Cooper (D) that examined racial injustice issues and ultimately recommended decriminalizing marijuana and studying broader legalization in response to racially disparate enforcement trends.

In recent sessions, multiple limited medical marijuana legalization bills advanced through the Senate, only to stall out in the House.

But Stein is making the case that moving forward on comprehensive recreational reform would help avoid issues that other states have experienced transitioning from medical to adult-use marijuana markets.

That position might put one of the advisory council’s appointed members, Sen. Bill Rabon (R), in an awkward place, as the senator has long championed bipartisan medical marijuana legalization legislation and insisted it should not be viewed as a step toward adult-use legalization.

Meanwhile, in the House, Rep. Aisha Dew (D) filed a bill in April that would legalize medical marijuana for patients with a variety of specified conditions, including cancer, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, Parkinson’s disease, PTSD, end-of-life care and other serious ailments.

The North Carolina Compassionate Care Act is considerably more detailed than a separate Democrat-led medical cannabis bill introduced earlier that month that would allow access only for patients enrolled in a “registered research study.”

Advocates had been awaiting House introduction of a comprehensive bill, especially since Senate President Phil Berger (R) said his chamber is deferring to the House to move first on medical marijuana reform this session.

Two other measures introduced so far this session would legalize cannabis in North Carolina. In the Senate, S350 would create medical and adult-use marijuana systems, while H413 in the House would legalize only recreational marijuana.


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.

House Speaker Destin Hall (R) said in early March that Republicans in his chamber could be willing to consider medical marijuana legalization this session. But he didn’t indicate any forthcoming House bills, instead suggesting legislation would come from the Senate.

Voters, for their part, seem to be on board with cannabis reform. A poll published in February found that 71 percent of likely voters in North Carolina support legalizing medical marijuana in the state, with majorities across party lines and in every surveyed demographic—aside from people over the age of 80—in favor.

Former House Speaker Tim Moore (R) said last year that while he personally supports legalizing medical marijuana, there is an informal rule in the chamber that at least 37 GOP members must back any given bill in order to bring it to the floor.

The current House speaker, Hall, has in the past voiced opposition to medical cannabis reform.

Former House Majority Leader John Bell (R) said in 2023 that while there were “still discussions going on” about medical marijuana legislation, he was “very sure you won’t see that bill move” due to insufficient support among Republicans. He said that was “unfortunately” the case.

An Indian tribe in North Carolina launched the state’s first medical marijuana dispensary last April—despite the protests of certain Republican congressional lawmakers. More than a week after legal marijuana sales kicked off to all adults at The Great Smoky Cannabis Co. in Cherokee last year, thousands from across the region made purchases.

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Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.

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Sports Fans Welcome Cannabis Brand Sponsorships For Teams In Professional Leagues Like NFL, NBA And MLB, Poll Shows

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A majority of sports fans across multiple leagues—from NFL to pro tennis and NBA to NASCAR—say it’s acceptable for cannabis companies to sponsor teams, according to a new survey.

As more professional sports leagues loosen policies around marijuana use among players, and some have allowed for cannabis-related sponsorships, the poll from Performance Research and Full Circle Research found either majority or plurality support for letting cannabis brands partner with teams.

There was more support for allowing CBD-related sponsorships, as opposed to deals with “THC brands,” but in no case was there majority opposition to either kind of partnership among fans of nine different sports leagues: NFL, NBA, MLB, MLS, UFC, NHL, Pro Tennis, Pro Golf and NASCAR.

Here’s the percentage of sports fans across those leagues who say it’s “completely” or “mostly” acceptable for CBD companies to sponsor teams:

  • MLS: 73 percent
  • UFC: 68 percent
  • Pro Tennis: 64 percent
  • NHL: 62 percent
  • Pro Golf: 62 percent
  • NBA: 60 percent
  • NASCAR: 56 percent
  • NFL: 55 percent
  • MLB: 55 percent

Here’s the percentage of sports fans across those leagues who say it’s “completely” or “mostly” acceptable for THC companies to sponsor teams:

  • MLS: 69 percent
  • UFC: 60 percent
  • NHL: 55 percent
  • Pro Tennis: 53 percent
  • NASCAR: 53 percent
  • NBA: 50 percent
  • Pro Golf: 49 percent
  • NFL: 46 percent
  • MLB: 46 percent

The survey included 1,o00 sports fans over the age of 21 in the 24 states where recreational marijuana is legal and was conducted between April 23-26.

“I think there’s no longer a justifiable reason to be shy about this,” Jed Pearsall, president and founder of Performance Research, told Sports Business Journal, which first reported the poll results.

The outlet reported that the survey also showed that a majority of sports fans’ perceptions of leagues and teams are either positively affected or unchanged due to cannabis sponsorships—though it also found that only 17 percent are aware of any such specific partnerships.

“I think those on the sales side can aggressively sell these opportunities and those on the sponsor side should realize that these opportunities will be welcome where they go,” Pearsall said. “Sports has a way of normalizing things, and that’s good for the cannabis industry, and those marketing with it.”

To that point, major sports leagues have been gradually reducing the stigma against cannabis use, with policy changes for players and professional affiliations with the industry.

For example, the NFL recently reached an agreement with its players union to further reform its marijuana policies, significantly reducing fines for positive tests while increasing the allowable THC threshold for players.

About four years after NFL ended the practice of suspending players over cannabis or other drugs as part of a collective bargaining agreement, the league has again revised its Substances of Abuse Policy and Performance Enhancing Substances Policy.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) last year voted to remove marijuana from its banned substances list for Division I players.

The reform builds on a 2022 change that increased the allowable THC threshold for college athletes, aligning NCAA’s rules with those of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

In October, Nevada regulators officially adopted a rule change that will protect athletes from being penalized for using or possessing marijuana in compliance with state law.

The head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) blasted the “unfair” ban on marijuana for athletes competing in international sport events, including the Olympics that were underway in Paris at the time of the comments.

USADA CEO Travis Tygart said it was “disappointing” that WADA has maintained the cannabis prohibition based on what he considers a misguided justification.

WADA did carry out a review into its marijuana policy at the request of USADA and the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) following the controversial suspension of U.S. runner Sha’Carri Richardson, who was barred from participating in the Olympics in 2021 after she tested positive for THC. Richardson said she used cannabis to cope with the recent passing of her mother.

While UFC announced in late 2023 that it was formally removing marijuana from its modified banned substances list for athletes, the league notified participants that the reform didn’t apply under California State Athletic Commission (CSAC) rules.

UFC advised fighters that they could be subject to a $100 fine by CSAS if they tested over 150 nanograms of THC per milliliter ahead of the UFC 298 event that took place in February.

At the beginning of 2024, the Brooklyn Nets and New York Liberty entered into partnerships with a CBD beverage company—the first teams in the NBA and WNBA, respectively, to forge deals with the cannabis industry.

The New York-based clubs are partnering with Mynd Drinks, a hemp-based CBD sparkling beverage company that also made history last year when it became an official partner of the Major League Baseball (MLB) team the Chicago Cubs.

Last year, NFL announced it was partnering with Canadian researchers on a clinical trial to test the safety and efficacy of CBD for pain management and neuroprotection from concussions—key issues for many football players who experience injuries as part of the game.

Separately, NFL and the Denver Broncos last year asked a federal court to reject a player’s lawsuit alleging discrimination over penalties he incurred due to positive THC tests from his prescribed use of a synthetic cannabinoid.

In a joint motion to dismiss filed with the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, the league and team defended their marijuana policy for players, affirming it’s their view that use of cannabis can lead to on-field injuries, poor job performance and “alienation of the fans.”

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