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Rep. Ocasio-Cortez Adviser Is Former Pro-Marijuana Advocate

by AP
January 12, 2019
in Business, Politics
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Rep. Ocasio-Cortez Adviser Is Former Pro-Marijuana Advocate
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The former director of federal policy for the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) has joined the staff of newly sworn-in Democratic U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York as a senior counsel and policy adviser.

Dan Riffle, who most recently served as communications director to former U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota and a legislative aide to former Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, both Democrats, will bring his expertise on health care and tax reform to the freshman congresswoman’s team at a time when her proposal to raise the top marginal tax rate is dominating headlines.

Sorry everyone, my bad. I’ll talk her up to 90. https://t.co/gl3VuiGISE

— Every Billionaire Is A Policy Failure (@DanRiffle) January 4, 2019

Having 🔥 Twitter game is not a hiring requirement for my policy team, but they bring it anyway ⬇️ https://t.co/qBb1clwhSq

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) January 5, 2019

While Riffle’s focus will not be on cannabis reform — at least for the time being — it will be interesting to see whether Ocasio-Cortez will embrace the former lobbyist’s nuanced views on legalization. Both believe that marijuana should be legalized at the federal level, though Riffle has expressed concerns that reform will follow a commercial model similar to that of alcohol and tobacco.

“Legalization is inevitable,” Riffle told the International Business Times in 2015. “But [people] haven’t put time into forming an alternative to the corporate model. That is something I’d like to work on.

“We don’t really know what the best policies are, and anyone who says they do is blowing smoke.”

Riffle said he left MPP in 2014 because of what he described as an industry takeover of the legalization movement. The national advocacy group had previously criticized large cannabis businesses for benefiting from their work but declining to pay it forward, he said. But as the industry expanded and started to contribute, it was able to “drive the agenda,” he said. The worry being that it’s increasingly driven toward corporatization.

Ocasio-Cortez, a self-described democratic socialist, has emphasized the racial injustices of cannabis criminalization enforcement and said that a pro-legalization platform can help galvanize audiences on social media.

A few more ways to gain traction:
– Support a Federal Jobs Guarantee
– Bailout Student Debt
– Legalize Marijuana & Explore Reparations, Baby Bonds

Here’s our Student Loan Cancellation Digital Town Hall w/ @StephanieKelton (from before my primary win!): https://t.co/A1QEZhniUQ pic.twitter.com/s0NeG2IMNr

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) January 2, 2019

In one of her widely watched Instagram live videos in November 2018, she called prohibition a “tool” of oppression against minorities that ought to be eradicated.

But what kind of legalization model she supports is yet to be seen.

For the time being, Ocasio-Cortez is invested in building a progressive coalition in the House that will tackle issues such as climate change, income inequality, and immigration. But a different kind of “Green New Deal” may soon be on the horizon, and the congresswoman will have a say in what that looks like as cannabis reform moves forward in Congress.

And at the very least, it stands to reason that Riffle’s background in the marijuana advocacy realm could be of service to the new congresswoman down the line.

This article has been republished from Marijuana Moment under a content syndication agreement. Read the original article here.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, left, speaks with Kerri Evelyn Harris in the photo uploaded to Flickr on Aug. 13, 2018. The freshman congresswoman from New York named Dan Riffle as her senior adviser. In addition to working for Democratic U.S. Reps. Keith Ellison of Minnesota and John Conyers of Michigan, Riffle was the federal policy director for the Marijuana Policy Project. (Photo by Corey Torpie via Flickr; used with a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license)

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