New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, a candidate for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, said on March 27, 2019, that he would consider issuing mass pardons and commutations for marijuana offenses if elected to the White House.

“Absolutely,” he said in response to a question during a CNN town hall about whether he would consider taking executive action to clear people punished under federal cannabis laws.

“The war on drugs has been a war on people,” Booker said. “As president of the United States, your job is to pursue justice. And what we see right now is so many folks suffering.”

The war on drugs has been a war on people. As president of the United States, your job is to pursue justice. And what we see right now is so many folks suffering. Click To Tweet

“If I am your president I am going to fight to make sure that we have sane drug laws and that we expunge the records of those people who are going through convictions and the aftermath for things like marijuana,” he said.

The New Jersey senator spoke about racial disparities in cannabis enforcement and said that discussions about ending prohibition have to include ways to rectify the damage that’s already been done.

“We fundamentally have laws in this country that have treated people differently,” he said. “I’m hoping all of us when we talk about marijuana legalization or marijuana decriminalization, in the same breath we’ve got to talk about expunging the records of everyone who is still suffering. Right now we have a lot of injustice in our criminal justice system.”

Booker has made cannabis and drug policy reform a centerpiece of his presidential bid during a campaign in which every other major Democratic contender now supports marijuana legalization.

In the Senate, he is the chief sponsor of the Marijuana Justice Act, which would deschedule cannabis and withhold certain federal funds from states that maintain racially discriminatory enforcement of prohibition.


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

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