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Boston Herald
Boston Herald
23 May 2023
Associated Press


NextImg:Sununu shifts to back legal pot in Granite State 

CONCORD, N.H.— A shift by Gov. Chris Sununu’s to support marijuana legalization has inspired a last-minute push for new legislation.

Though several bipartisan bills in support of legalizing recreational marijuana have cleared the House in recent years, Sununu opposed them and they ultimately failed in the Senate. But after the latest defeat earlier this month, Sununu announced that he would back legalization if lawmakers took a different approach.

The House Commerce Committee voted Tuesday to amend an unrelated bill as a vehicle for a new plan where the state regulates marijuana the same way it controls the sale of wine and liquor, in line with what the Republican governor and potential presidential candidate outlined.

The bill that was defeated in the Senate would have included a 12.5% tax levied at the cultivation level. The latest measure is similar to a plan lawmakers considered last year that would put the New Hampshire Liquor Commission in charge of regulating and selling cannabis.

But unlike that failed measure, it would allow the state’s medical marijuana dispensaries to sell both medical and recreational cannabis.

Former state Rep. Susan Homola spoke against the bill, saying lawmakers who continue to push for it have ignored data on the harmful effects of legalization. Homola, a Republican, also accused supporters of playing politics with the issue.

“Through the governor’s flip-flop on recreational marijuana in the ninth hour of the legislative session to this committee’s willingness to jam in this bill that’s already been shot down in the Senate … it’s clear that this isn’t way to legislate,” she said.

Nearly half the states, including the rest of New England, allow recreational use of marijuana.