Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer
Chuck SchumerOvernight Energy & Environment — Manchin imperils Fed nomination over climate Progressive groups target Schumer in climate spending push A chance to improve research MORE (D-N.Y.) on Thursday announced on the floor that he will use his clout to make legislation ending the federal prohibition on marijuana a top priority.
Marijuana is currently listed as a Schedule 1 banned drug under the Controlled Substances Act, and an estimated 40,000 Americans are in jail because of cannabis-related offenses, according to Forbes.
Schumer on Thursday said he will throw his political weight behind legalizing marijuana, which was declared illegal on a nationwide basis in 1937.
“I am the first majority leader to say it’s time to end the federal prohibition on marijuana and as majority leader, I’m going to push this issue forward and make it a priority for the Senate,” Schumer said in his morning remarks.
Schumer doubled down on remarks a day earlier at a press conference introducing a draft of the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act, which would lift the federal prohibition on cannabis and allow state-compliant cannabis businesses to have access to financial services such as bank accounts and loans.
The legislation is also sponsored by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden
Ronald (Ron) Lee WydenThis week: Congress ramps up penalties against Russia over invasion On The Money — US suspending normal trade with Russia Treasury slaps new sanctions on Russian elites MORE (D-Ore.) and Sen. Cory Booker
Cory BookerTo build for the future, we need updated rainfall records Bipartisan group of senators press Mayorkas on US readiness for Russian cyberthreat Senate Democrats 'deeply disappointed' in Biden administration's decision to keep Trump-era rule MORE (D-N.J.).
“It makes eminent sense to legalize marijuana,” Schumer said on Wednesday. “A number of states, including my own of New York, just legalized recently. The doom and gloom predictions haven't materialized in any of these states. And as more and more states legalize marijuana, it's time for our federal cannabis law to catch up.”
Schumer on Thursday touted the bill as one that would make “monumental change.”
“At long last it would take steps to right the wrongs of the failed war on drugs,” he said, noting it would remove marijuana from the federal list of controlled substances and expunge the criminal records of those with low-level marijuana offenses.