by Benjamin Yount
Wisconsin’s assembly speaker is not calling his proposal for medical marijuana dead, but he says it’s not going to happen this year.
Speaker Robin Vos told reporters Thursday there are too many different views of marijuana to find a consensus on a strict-medical only plan.
“I think we have now seen, unfortunately, people who from the very beginning have said that they have concerns that this will lead to widespread recreational marijuana and many of my colleagues on the other side continue to say that that is their goal which of course that’s their right,” Vos (pictured above) said.
Vos’ plan would create five state-owned marijuana dispensaries that would sell non-smokable marijuana to people with 15 specific health conditions.
Republicans in the Wisconsin Senate, specifically, don’t like the idea of state-owned pot shops.
“I still think we have the votes in the Assembly to pass it,” Vos added. “I’ve not had anybody come to me who was a supporter and say they have changed their position. But when we see that the Senate wants to have a more liberal version than one that we’re willing to pass, it probably doesn’t leave us enough time with the waiting days of the session to get an answer that both chambers can adopt.”
Democrats in Wisconsin have made no secret of their support for fully legal, recreational marijuana and never signed on to Vos’ plan either.
Wisconsin remains one of just 12 states without a medical marijuana law. Wisconsin is one of 26 states that has not legalized recreational marijuana.
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Benjamin Yount is a contributor to The Center Square.