Trump, marijuana
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Cannabis moves from Schedule I to Schedule III under the executive order. The president said it 'doesn't legalize marijuana in any way, shape or form.'
Trump's decision to move marijuana to Schedule III could ease taxes and expand medical access, but industry leaders warn it may also trigger stricter federal oversight and new legal risks.
If marijuana rescheduling is finalized as President Donald Trump instructed on Thursday, the practical policy impact on the federal level will be somewhat limited, as cannabis would remain illegal. But lawmakers in states like Pennsylvania and Tennessee say the political effect could ultimately prove more impactful as they work to enact local reforms in the
Presidential change in classification of marijuana is unlikely to change the battle that's expected at the Idaho ballot box next November over medical marijuana legalization. 🗳️
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What marijuana rescheduling means for Indiana
President Donald Trump's executive order on marijuana regulations sparks discussions on legalization in Indiana.
Florida’s attorney general is asking the state Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of an initiative to legalize marijuana that activists want to put on the 2026 ballot. The court accepted the request,
The Trump administration this week took steps to potentially reclassify cannabis as a less dangerous drug. Dr. Sue Sisley, an internal medicine clinician and principal investigator at the Scottsdale Research Institute in Arizona,