By J.J. McCoy, Senior Managing Editor for New Frontier Data
For four months since last fall’s elections, the cannabis industry has anxiously anticipated word about the Trump administration’s posture toward marijuana policy, and whether the Department of Justice would change the status quo established under the 2013 Cole Memo.
During the campaign, Trump went on record as “a hundred percent” in favor of medical cannabis. Likewise, while he was more skeptical of legalizing adult use, he nonetheless favored states’ rights and seemed uninterested in breaking up existing legalized programs. On the day he won the presidency, California, Maine, Massachusetts, and Nevada each voted to legalize adult use, while Arkansas, Florida, Montana and North Dakota mandated medical programs. Those brought the current total to 28 states and the District of Columbia for jurisdictions with some measure of legal cannabis for either medical or adult use, and the market broadening faster than most expected.
Indeed, New Frontier’s analysts noted some interesting data points with possible political implications:
Last week, new Attorney General Jeff Sessions told the National Association of Attorneys General that he was reviewing the current DOJ policy about enforcing federal laws against marijuana, if without having decided whether to become tougher than the policy detailed in Cole Memo, which directed federal prosecutions to focus chiefly on distribution to minors, involvement of gangs or organized crime, or marijuana plants grown on federal land.
To some industry stakeholders, that news and some recent comments by White House spokesman Sean Spicer switched November’s green light in the marketplace to a reddish-yellow. But then Politico reported how Sessions has privately reassured some Republican senators that he won’t deviate from the holdover Obama-era policy of allowing states to implement their own marijuana laws.
Taking nothing for granted, last Thursday 11 senators from eight states including Republican Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Democrat Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) asked for definitive clarification that the Cole Memo “remain in place [to] ensure that state infrastructure, including tax revenue, small businesses, and jobs, can be protected.”
“These discussions offer opportunity for rigorous debate on the issue,” said New Frontier Data CEO Giadha Aguirre De Carcer. “New Frontier’s mission is to provide vetted data and insights to all who would like greater transparency into the industry, with the aim of informed decisions based on hard facts.” Per jobs and taxable revenue, for example, “this data highlights the complexity of this debate and the number of Americans that would be impacted by the outcomes,” De Carcer concluded.
J.J. McCoy is Senior Managing Editor for New Frontier Data. A former staff writer for The Washington Post, he is a career journalist having covered emerging technologies among industries including aviation, satellites, transportation, law enforcement, the Smart Grid and professional sports. He has reported from the White House, the U.S. Senate, three continents and counting.