Where Presidential Candidate Nikki Haley Stands On Marijuana

February 22, 2023 · marijuanamoment.net

The 2024 presidential election cycle is already heating up, with former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) announcing that she’s seeking the Republican nomination. So where does she stand on marijuana policy issues?

That’s a question that will be asked of all major candidates over the coming months as the circle of prospective nominees inevitably widens.

Haley, who also served as United Nations (UN) ambassador under President Donald Trump, doesn’t have an especially extensive cannabis background. But she did sign limited reform legislation into law during her time as governor. And she’s expressed openness to continuing conversations with advocates and lawmakers about the issue.

In general, it appears that she’s supportive of state-based reform action, at least on a limited basis, and is sympathetic to patients who’ve benefitted from medical cannabis. But her record is light, and she hasn’t yet indicated whether she’d seek to broadly end federal prohibition if elected.

Haley will be running against Trump for the nomination, as the former president announced his candidacy back in November, about two years after losing re-election to President Joe Biden.

Here’s where Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley stands on marijuana:

Legislation And Policy Actions

During her time as South Carolina’s governor from 2011-2017, Haley signed two pieces of modest cannabis reform legislation into law.

First, in 2014, Haley signed a bill from Sen. Tom Davis (R) to allow doctors to prescribe cannabidiol oil to patients suffering from severe epilepsy and for whom conventional therapies proved ineffective.

The measure from Davis, who has also championed broader medical marijuana legalization in the state, also called for a clinical trial at the Medical University of South Carolina to further explore the medical potential of CBD to treat the condition.

The same year, Haley put her signature on a bill to legalize industrial hemp in South Carolina and remove the nonintoxicating form of the cannabis plant from the state’s definition of illegal marijuana.

Advocates and hemp stakeholders applauded these actions. Limited as they might have been, they represented progress in the deep red state. And each year since, Davis has worked to build on the medical cannabis reform.

The senator recently filed a revised version of his medical marijuana legalization bill for the 2023 session. Haley’s position on the broader policy change is unclear, though she indicated in 2014 that she didn’t feel the state was ready to go beyond limited CBD oil for patients.

On The Campaign Trail

Haley does not appear to have weighed in on cannabis issues since announcing her candidacy.

Previous Quotes And Social Media Posts

Asked about cannabis legalization in 2014, the then-governor said that the state has “tried to do some sentencing reform in the past and we’re in the process of analyzing whether that’s worked.”

“For marijuana reform, I’m not there,” she added. “I know the legislators have stated—there’s a bill coming through now that they’re starting to do, but I don’t get a sense from the people of South Carolina, nor do I feel that at this point, it’s a hot topic or something that is moving forward. We’re watching the other states do what they can—which, again, I appreciate that states can make those decisions,” she added. “While they are doing that in the best interest of them, we have not seen that as a priority and in the best interest of South Carolina.”

Haley also met with medical cannabis advocates in 2016, including a girl named Dixie Pace who suffered from severe epilepsy and whose mother pushed the legislature to enact reform.

The governor was “very receptive and sweet to Dixie,” a person who attended the meeting told FITSNews at the time.

Marijuana is noticeably absent on Haley’s social media accounts, though she has commented on broader drug policy issues since leaving her position as a UN ambassador in 2018.

One of the more telling posts came as a reply to a person whose comment has since been deleted.

She wrote: “I have been to Afghanistan and am aware of how we have worked on replacing poppy production as well as trying to curb other drug production but it is not working. After all these years we haven’t dented what is happening there.”

While not an explicit endorsement of taking a different approach to prohibition and eradication, it signals an awareness of the ineffectiveness of the policy, at least as it’s been applied for poppy production—a perspective that could easily transfer to marijuana.

On the other hand, though, Haley has also suggested support for border crackdowns to stop the flow of drugs.

Days before announcing her presidential bed she tweeted that “to stop drugs pouring over the border, we need a president willing to defend the border.”

“Without borders, we aren’t a country. Biden’s failed policies have lit our southern border on fire and led to countless border deaths and drugs flowing throughout our communities,” Haley said in December. “If we don’t right this ship now, there’s no telling how bad it can get.”

Drug policy experts would likely criticize the candidate’s characterization of the issue as an oversimplification—and one that was repeatedly echoed by Trump during his campaign and presidency. But the comments nevertheless offer a window into Haley’s international drug policy stance and how it overlaps with her immigration position.

In 2019, Haley criticized federal spending on substance treatment in Afghanistan, arguing that money should instead “be going towards drug addiction in the US.”

Haley discussed drug policy issues a couple of times during her Senate confirmation process prior to becoming UN ambassador in 2017.

She told one senator who asked about the bloody “drug war” in the Philippines that extrajudicial killings of suspects by police there constitutes a violation of basic human rights, saying that she is “prepared to speak up on anything that goes against American values” and that “we have always been the moral compass of the world, and we need to continue to act out and vocalize that as we go forward.”

Another lawmaker asked about cooperation with Mexico to combat drug cartels.

“Drug trafficking has destabilized Latin America and the expansion of fentanyl trafficking and precursor chemicals used in its production have become lucrative sources of revenue for Chinese criminals,” Haley replied. “The expansion of Mexican origin heroin has devastated communities throughout the U.S., with an immeasurable human toll. Unfortunately these drugs have a higher profit rate and are cost effective to smuggle into the U.S. than marijuana and cocaine. We must work to identify and shut down the illicit trafficking infrastructure from physical to financial and continue working to weaken the influence of drug trafficking organizations.”

Personal Experience With Marijuana

It does not appear that Haley has publicly commented about any personal experience with marijuana.

Marijuana Under A Haley Presidency

Given what limited information there is available about Haley’s position on cannabis policy beyond medical cannabis and hemp, it’s difficult to conclusively say how she’d approach the issue in the Oval Office.

That said, her more recent focus on increasing border enforcement to mitigate drug trafficking, combined with her reluctance to embrace going beyond CBD oil at the state level as governor, leaves ample room to speculate that she would not be a champion of the types of reforms that advocates are pushing for in the modern era.

Her record does signal a level of sympathy for medical marijuana patients and a respect for states taking some action on cannabis policy, but it’s not exactly clear at this point that she’d be a vocal ally for the reform movement.

Marijuana Moment reached out to Haley’s campaign for comment on the candidate’s current thinking on cannabis policy matters, but a representative did not respond by the time of publication. (Full Story)

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