Trump reclassifies marijuana defying dire Republican warnings of brain drain that will embolden China
26 GOP lawmakers warned Trump that he is sending the wrong message on marijuana. "Rescheduling tells our youth that marijuana use is acceptable and safe, a dangerous falsehood that will sink us deeper into our country’s drug crisis,"
By Charlie Spiering
Daily Mail
Dec 18, 2025
President Donald Trump sits in the Oval Office to sign an executive order to reclassify marijuana as a schedule III drug
President Donald Trump signed an an executive order to free up federal restrictions on marijuana on Thursday, despite deep reservations from his most fierce allies on Capitol Hill.
'I promised to be the president of common sense and that is exactly what we are doing,' Trump said.
He said that 'so many people' reached out to him to endorse the idea, particularly from people suffering from the pain as a result of cancer.
'It doesn't legalize marijuana in any way, shape or form,' he said. 'And in no way sanctions it's use for a recreational drug,' Trump said.
The president pointedly repeated his opposition to the use of illegal drugs.
'I always told my kids don't take drugs,' Trump said, telling America's youth to 'just don't do it.'
Trump's executive order reclassifies marijuana from a Schedule I drug with 'no currently accepted medical use' to a Schedule III drug, primarily to free up the plant allowing it to be researched.
Marijuana business stocks spiked on Wall Street as news of the president's decision on the issue was made public.
The president cited the benefits of marijuana for medical use as a common sense decision
Senior administration officials described the order as the president keeping his 2024 campaign promise.
Last year Trump announced support for rescheduling the drug to allow 'research to unlock the medical uses of marijuana' even though he expressed his desire to ban it's use in public spaces to prevent the smell from affecting cities.
A senior administration official told the Daily Mail that the president sided with a 'common sense' approach, to improve research into medical marijuana and CBD products.
'The president has heard from so many people who have talked about the potential benefits of medical marijuana and CBD use,' the official said.
Many America seniors, the official noted, were using the drug to manage 'chronic pain' and that the president was 'very focused' on opening it up for research into the health risks of doing so.
Trump's action divides the political coalition that voted him into office.
Advocates argue that marijuana and psilocybin no longer rank with other deadly drugs like heroin and should be reclassified, allowing it to be studied. The decision will also encourage more banking and investment into marijuana businesses.
The rescheduling issue is also opposed by some pharmaceutical groups, who prefer Americans rely on legal medications for treaments.
Traditional conservatives are generally not supportive of legalizing or streamlining any use of marijuana, warning of the societal and health consequences of doing so.
Several House Republicans protested the president's decision, issuing a letter on Thursday morning warning Trump from sending the wrong message on marijuana.
The letter was signed by Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Maryland and 24 other GOP lawmakers to urge him against the decision.
Small marijuana plants, available for sale, are shown in a medical marijuana dispensary in Oakland, California
A venture capital booth is seen at the Cannabis World Congress and Business Exposition.
"Rescheduling tells our youth that marijuana use is acceptable and safe, a dangerous falsehood that will sink us deeper into our country’s drug crisis,' the letter read.
Republicans expressed their concerns that loosening the restrictions on marijuana research would only enhance the cultural shift toward normalizing it's use for recreational use.
"Rescheduling marijuana will not make America great. You have always been a role model for America’s youth, telling young people for years that they should never do drugs. We hope that you consider the harms of marijuana rescheduling and continue sending that strong message of hope to the next generation."
Four senators — Todd Budd, John Barrasso, Tom Cotton, and Shelley Moore Capito, — joined their Republican congressional colleagues.
'The only winners from rescheduling will be bad actors such as Communist China, while Americans will be left paying the bill,' they wrote, citing marijuana's link to mass shooters and depression, anxiety, suicide and psychosis.
The letter also warned of damage from marijuana use on 'brain health' and 'permanent IQ loss.'
'[F]acilitating the growth of the marijuana industry is at odds with growing our economy and encouraging healthy lifestyles for Americans,' the letter read.
1 comment:
The cattle have been out of the gate for years. I'm not surprised.
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