Congress us capitol

Is The U.S. House Voting On The MORE Act In 2022?

Washington, DC: Today, the House of Representatives listed the Marijuana Opportunity, Reinvestment, and Expungement (MORE) Act, HR 3617 for a vote the week of March 28th.

“Thanks to House Leadership, Chairman Nadler, and Reps Blumenauer and Lee, for the first time in history, Americans will be able to go to the polls knowing if their Representative voted to end prohibition or voted instead to maintain the racist and senseless policy of marijuana criminalization,” said Justin Strekal of BOWL PAC. “Now is the time for lawmakers to ask themselves the question: ‘Do I want to vote against the will of the supermajority of American voters?'”

Since its inception earlier this year, BOWL PAC has been active in pushing for a House vote before the April congressional recess. The group’s efforts include leading a joint action petition that has garnered nearly 50,000 signatures, joining the Marijuana Justice Coalition on a letter, and leading a separate letter to House Leadership from a diverse group of stakeholders. Thousand of voters have additionally sent messages to their lawmakers using the groups letter-writing tool.


More about MORE

Core Feature: The MORE Act, HR 3617, would end the federal prohibition and criminalization of marijuana, thus providing individual states with the authority to be the primary arbiters of cannabis policy.

FURTHER: The MORE Act would also make several other important changes to federal marijuana policy, including:

  • Facilitating the expungement of low-level, federal marijuana convictions, and incentivizing state and local governments to take similar actions;
  • Creating pathways for ownership opportunities in the emerging regulated industry as well as other sectors of the economy for local and diversely-reflective entrepreneurs who have been impacted under prohibition through the Small Business Administration grant eligibility;
  • Allowing veterans, for the first time, to obtain medical cannabis recommendations from their VA doctors in states that have an established medical cannabis program;
  • Removing the threat of deportation for immigrants accused of minor marijuana infractions or who are gainfully employed in the state-legal cannabis industry;
  • Providing critical reinvestment grant opportunities for communities that have suffered disproportionate rates of marijuana-related enforcement actions;
  • Protecting and respecting the basic rights and civil liberties of consumers under federal law when it comes to public benefits.

Key Facts

  • According to a recent report by the ACLU, Black Americans are 3.6 times more likely to be arrested for cannabis-related crimes than white Americans.
  • According to the FBI UCR, over 350,000 Americans were arrested for marijuana-related crimes in 2020 alone, over 90% of those arrested were charged with mere possession.
  • The state-legal cannabis industry employs over 428,000 full-time workers; that is over four times the number of jobs specific to the coal industry.
  • While the substance is not without harm, cannabis is objectively less harmful than legal and regulated alcohol and tobacco.

National Polling

Quinnipiac University, April 2021

Question: Do you think that the use of marijuana should be made legal in the United States, or not?

  • Overall: 69% Yes – 25% No
  • Democrat: 78% Yes – 17% No
  • Republicans: 62% Yes – 32% No
  • Independents: 67% Yes – 28% No

Gallup Polling, Nov. 2021

Question: Do you think the use of marijuana should be made legal, or not?

  • Overall: 68% Yes – 32% No
  • Democrat: 83% Yes – 16% No
  • Republicans: 50% Yes – 49% No
  • Independents: 71% Yes – 28% No

Pew Research Center, April 2021

Question: Which comes closer to your view about the use of marijuana by adults?

  • 60% It should be legal for medical AND recreational use
  • 31% It should be legal for medical use ONLY
  • 8% It should NOT be legal

Breakdown:

  • 12% of Republicans say marijuana should NOT be legal
  • 5% of Democrats say marijuana should NOT be legal

###

BOWL PAC works to unify the public, interest groups, and policymakers behind a comprehensive approach to marijuana legalization and justice for those who have been harmed under its criminalization.

Source: Emailed press release