January 9, 2026
News Article
January 9, 2026

Any marijuana-related policy garners considerable attention from medical professionals, lawyers, politicians, and, of course, the general public. President Trump’s recent executive order provides another example. 
A quick Google reveals headlines and articles from Fox News, PBS News, ABC News, CNBC, and the New York Times declaring President Trump has “reclassified marijuana.” You can find similar headlines across the pond
Many others question what this “historic policy shift” means for cannabis users, for marijuana policy in each state, for the Republican Party, and even for the entire US
These are interesting questions—but a close reading of the executive order shows they might be overzealous. As featured on the White House website, the executive order is for “increasing medical marijuana and cannabidiol research.” It never mentions recreational marijuana use. 
Trump’s order highlights a troublesome problem—a drug scheduling deeming marijuana “no currently accepted medical use” with medical research clearly indicating this is not true. 
Noting marijuana’s classification serves as a roadblock to better research, the order reads, “decades of Federal drug control policy have neglected marijuana’s medical uses.  That oversight has limited the ability of scientists and manufacturers to complete the necessary research on safety and efficacy to inform doctors and patients.” It continues, “It is critical to close the gap between current medical marijuana and CBD use and medical knowledge of risks and benefits, including for specific populations and conditions.”
But what does the executive order do to help “close the gap?” Simply this:
The Attorney General shall take all necessary steps to complete the rulemaking process related to rescheduling marijuana to Schedule III of the CSA in the most expeditious manner in accordance with Federal law, including 21 U.S.C. 811.
The passage gives no direct order to reclassify—only to “complete the rulemaking process,” which might lead to rescheduling. Plenty of petitions in the past trying to reschedule marijuana were denied. It also gives no timeline for when rescheduling will happen. Even if marijuana becomes a Schedule III substance, the process can take 9 years
This is the only command issued in the entire executive order. Headlines and interpretations that indicate anything more are speculative. Nonetheless, this underwhelming executive order could become the impetus for rescheduling marijuana, driven by grassroots efforts and state-level reform. 
Scheduling aside, 47 states allow marijuana for medicinal use, with 38 of these states providing comprehensive medical marijuana programs. Over 6 million patients benefit from these treatments. Marijuana is legal for recreational use in 24 states, and several more states are likely to legalize it this year
We have seen local and state-level efforts drive national policy before. In 2001, Arizona became the first state to allow terminally ill patients access to try potentially life-saving experimental medical treatments. This “right-to-try legislation” spread rapidly. By 2017, 37 states had enacted right-to-try laws. Over the same period, the FDA received more than 9,000 petitions from patients and physicians requesting access to experimental medications. In 2018, under President Trump’s first term, right-to-try became federal law. 
Advocates of marijuana legalization still have reason for optimism because reform is possible with enough pressure. President Trump’s recent executive order could be a sign that a long-overdue rescheduling is on the horizon. But it is nowhere near sufficient itself.
is a Research Fellow and Director of FDAReview.org at the Independent Institute. He is Faculty Fellow, Center for the Study of Public Choice and Private Enterprise Assistant Professor, Agribusiness and Applied Economics at North Dakota State University
Civil Liberties and Human RightsCrime, Criminal Justice, and PrisonsDrug War
Jan 9, 2026
Sven Beckert’s Capitalism: A Global History is…not a reliable…
Jan 8, 2026
Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro was captured by U.S. military forces and extradited to the…
Jan 6, 2026
The illusion of U.S. regime change.
Jan 5, 2026
California’s fraudulent activities have been public for years, but with little…
Jan 3, 2026
An unassuming, though invaluable, pioneer of the American spirit.
Jan 2, 2026
Slashing approval steps and bureaucratic oversights should bring drugs to the market and to patients faster…
Dec 25, 2025
The Virgin Islands government didn’t get the memo that Bruen was decided.
Dec 17, 2025
San Antonio shows how compassion and coordination can dramatically reduce…
Dec 16, 2025
The first 10 amendments were meant to restrain Washington, not the states.
Dec 8, 2025
As tensions between Washington and Caracas intensify, over 250,000 Venezuelans living…
Dec 6, 2025
Skewed understanding of terrorism, and little respect for the victims and their families.
Dec 2, 2025
The White House has been explicit about its objectives in the war on…
Nov 21, 2025
Lessons of costly interventions
Nov 21, 2025
Planning is the enemy of play.
Nov 20, 2025
As President Donald Trump continues to blast small…
Nov 20, 2025
An increasing amount of public attention has been drawn to…
Nov 17, 2025
Earlier this year, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass issued a statement titled…
Nov 13, 2025
Over the last two decades, the drug overdose crisis—driven by opioids—has taken an unimaginable…
The Lighthouse is the weekly email newsletter of the Independent Institute and provides updates on Independent’s latest articles, research, publications, events, and media programs.
The Independent Institute
100 Swan Way
Oakland, CA 94621-1428
Phone (510) 632-1366
Fax (510) 568-6040
Follow Us
Copyright © 2026 Independent Institute – All Rights Reserved
Follow Us

source