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[15] [16] Trump's signing statement suggested that the congressional limitation on spending authority did not legally bind him. [16] In June 2018, Trump stated that he would "probably" support the STATES Act, a bipartisan bill that would effectively end the federal prohibition on marijuana and leave the issue up to the states. [17] [18]
[35] [36] On June 13, the bill passed 14-10 in the New Hampshire Senate, then was tabled (killed) in the House. [37] [38] Around January 7, the Hawaii Attorney General released an over 300-page draft legalization bill to be considered by the state legislature. [39] A state senate legalization bill, SB3335, was introduced on January 24. [40]
An initiative petition that would legalize recreational marijuana will remain on the Nov. 8 ballot after the Missouri Supreme Court declined to transfer a lawsuit challenging it.
When Missouri voters legalized adult-use marijuana in November 2022, a 6% sales tax was enacted on the sale of all recreational marijuana products. DHSS transfers $16.3 million to state agencies ...
Although Trump's current position falls short of opposing the national ban on marijuana, his turnaround on the merits of state legalization and his late-breaking support for federal reform could ...
On December 17, 2009, Rev. Bryan A. Krumm, CNP, filed a rescheduling petition for Cannabis with the DEA arguing that "because marijuana does not have the abuse potential for placement in Schedule I of the CSA, and because marijuana now has accepted medical use in 13 states, and because the DEA's own Administrative Law Judge has already ...
A 3% tax on marijuana is on the ballot in many Missouri cities next week. But it’s also on the ballot in counties, raising the question that if both pass, will consumers see a 6% tax increase?
[46] [47] In May 2024, a Missouri district court ruled that cities and counties can both tax recreational cannabis. [48] After voters passed the 3% tax increase in St. Louis, the city missed an administrative deadline, causing lost revenues of around $500,000. St. Louis filed the paperwork to begin collecting the tax in January 2024. [49] [50]