by Derrick A. Max

Governor Abigail Spanberger announced her support for a deal to create a legal retail cannabis market in Virginia โ only weeks after vetoing a bill to do much the same thing.
That should give Virginians pause.
Virginia has yet to pass a budget and is only two weeks from a government shutdown.ย While lawmakers were still deadlocked over the data center tax exemptions, the governor announced that she is now prepared to accept a retail marijuana market as a part of the budget package — weeks after vetoing a similar cannabis bill. That makes the proposal look less like a carefully crafted framework and more like a legislative sweetener to weaken the opposition of Senator L. Louise Lucas, who is both a vocal supporterย of marijuana legalization and the owner of the Cannabis Outlet in Portsmouth, VA.ย
When the governor vetoed the earlier cannabis legislation, she said that the bill needed stronger protections for children, clearer enforcement authority, more resources for product testing and inspections, better tools to shut down illicit operators, and a regulatory system that would put public safety first.
Those were not minor objections.
Now, with a government shutdown threatened, the governor says those concerns have been sufficiently addressed. The new cannabis agreement would allow retail cannabis sales beginning in July 2027, authorize hundreds of retail licenses, increase the legal possession limit, impose new state and local taxes, regulate intoxicating hemp products, and direct some revenue toward education, substance-abuse prevention, public health, and equity programs.
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