top of page
tokers-guide-find-the-best-weed-in-dc-lo
NEW 1 to 1 photo editing 122024 (17).png
A GOP-controlled congressional committee is set to vote on bills targeting Washington, D.C. policies, including a measure to repeal a local law expanding expungements for marijuana possession. This effort is aimed at "restoring law and order" in D.C., according to Rep. James Comer. The proposed repeal targets the Second Chance Amendment Act, which mandated automatic expungement of certain marijuana possession records. This comes amidst ongoing frustration from advocates and D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton regarding congressional interference with the District's cannabis laws, particularly an annual appropriations rider preventing D.C. from using its tax dollars for regulated recreational marijuana sales. Despite this, local officials have expanded the medical marijuana program as a workaround.

Congressional GOP Moves To Repeal Marijuana Expungements Law In Washington, D.C. To Fulfill Trump Goal Of ‘Restoring Law And Order’

Sep 8, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



A GOP-controlled congressional committee is set to vote on a series of
bills this week targeting various Washington, D.C. policies, including one
measure that would repeal a local law expanding expungements for marijuana
possession.

The House Oversight Committee, chaired by Rep. James Comer (R-KY), will
meet on Wednesday for the markup of 14 bills focused on amending or
repealing multiple D.C. laws.

“President Trump and House Republicans are committed to restoring law and
order in our nation’s capital city,” Comer said in a press release on
Friday, noting the president’s push to address perceived inadequacies of
local law enforcement.

Part of that effort involves the proposed repeal of the Second Chance
Amendment Act, a D.C. law passed in 2022 that took effect the next year.

Under the law, the District’s judiciary was mandated to automatically
expunge marijuana possession records for offenses that took place before
D.C. enacted a limited cannabis legalization law in 2014.

*Heres’s the key text of the D.C. law that the congressional bill would
repeal:*

“The Court shall order automatic expungement of all criminal records and
court proceedings related only to citations, arrests, charges, or
convictions for the commission of a criminal offense that has subsequently
been decriminalized, legalized, or held to be unconstitutional by the Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia or the Supreme Court of the United
States, or records related only to simple possession for any quantity of
marijuana in violation of § 48-904.01(d)(1) before February 15, 2015…”

“Under President Trump’s decisive leadership, crime in D.C. is now falling
at an unprecedented rate,” Comer said. “The House Oversight Committee
stands ready to back the President’s swift action by advancing
comprehensive legislative reforms that empower District law enforcement and
tackle the escalating juvenile crime crisis head-on.”

Advocates have already been frustrated with congressional interference with
the District’s cannabis laws—particularly the annual renewal of an
appropriations rider from Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) barring D.C. from using
its local tax dollars to implement a system of regulated recreational
marijuana sales.

While Comer put the new repeal bill on the committee’s agenda for
Wednesday, he previously signaled that he’d be open to revisiting the rider.
Asked about the possibility of lifting restrictions on D.C. legal cannabis
sales, he said in late 2023 “if that’s what Washington D.C. wants, yeah.”

Last week, the House Appropriations Committee again advanced the underlying
spending bill with the rider kept intact.


*— Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug
policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon
supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps,
charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.*


*Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on
Patreon to get access. —*

Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) has criticized appropriators for putting
forward a bill that restricts the District’s autonomy in a number of ways,
including the rider to “prohibit the use of funds to commercialize
recreational marijuana.”

“I am outraged at the number and scope of anti-D.C. home rule riders in the
bill released today,” Norton said when the measure cleared subcommittee in
July.

The congresswoman said in May that she would again again push her
colleagues to join her in an effort to remove the cannabis language.

“As Congress works on the fiscal year 2026 appropriation bill, I will
continue to fight to remove this rider,” she said, while referencing a
statement from the White House that called the District’s move to enact
local marijuana reform an example of a “failed” policy that “opened the
door to disorder.”

Trump’s budget request that he released in June similarly contained the
Harris rider preventing marijuana sales in D.C., despite voters in the
jurisdiction voting to approve legalization in 2014. Former President Joe
Biden also repeatedly requested the continuation of the D.C. cannabis rider
in budget proposals during his time in office.

While D.C. hasn’t been able to use its local funds to implement a system of
regulated recreational cannabis sales over the last decade, local officials
have taken steps to expand the city’s existing medical marijuana program as
a workaround.

The post Congressional GOP Moves To Repeal Marijuana Expungements Law In
Washington, D.C. To Fulfill Trump Goal Of ‘Restoring Law And Order’
appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

Recent Reviews

bottom of page