The post Virginia Lawmakers Kill Marijuana Decriminalization Bill appeared first on High Times.
The pattern followed by marijuana reform in America is so predictable you can use it to set a clock. In Virginia, where 85 percent of voters support medical cannabis, and where new Governor Ralph Northam supports decriminalization, a bill to allow sick people to access cannabis passed the state Senate before a deadlocked vote meant it died in the state House. In plainer language, Virginia lawmakers kill marijuana decriminalization bill. For another song in this same key, look to Congress, where a few powerful committee chairs are responsible for blocking federal marijuana reform from so much as having a hearing.
What Just Happened In Virginia?
What happened? Partisan politics?
“It’s definitely not a party issue,” insisted Nikki Narduzzi, a Republican who serves on the state’s chapter of NORML.
Oh, but it is.
On Monday, Virginia lawmakers had the opportunity to pass yet another popular marijuana reform measure—this one to decriminalize small amounts of cannabis. A few days after killing a similar bill, lawmakers voted along party lines to defeat an effort that would have made possession of marijuana a civil infraction rather than a misdemeanor. The vote: Nine Republicans against, and 6 Democrats in favor.
What happened? According to some, it appears someone got to Senate Majority Leader Tommy Norment, who previously cast himself as a “decriminalization supporter.” The Republican “flipped positions,” as per the paper after he discovered that a decriminalization bill wouldn’t make it out of committee.
Already in damage control, Norment tried to paint himself as a pragmatist—and anyone who wanted more (as in actual reform) as some kind of wide-eyed fanatic. “There are always those