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GOP Senator Threatens To Block Bills To Reopen Government If Hemp THC Ban Moves Forward
Oct 29, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
A GOP senator says he’s willing to hold up spending legislation to end the
ongoing government shutdown if Congress attempts to move forward with a
controversial plan to ban hemp products containing THC—though he’s warning
there’s a “real danger” he won’t prevail. As such, he argues that it’s
imperative for the industry make its voice heard on Capitol Hill over the
coming days.
At a virtual event hosted by Hemp Industry & Farmers of America (HIFA) on
Tuesday, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) gave a status update on efforts to keep the
proposed hemp ban out of appropriations legislation that’s being negotiated
by House and Senate lawmakers. He stressed that “we’re at crunch time” to
prevent the prohibition from being enacted.
With much of the executive branch still shut down after weeks of contention
on Capitol Hill over unrelated issues, Paul said he remains “amenable” to
blocking any measure to end the stalemate without assurances that the hemp
market won’t be recriminalized under plans championed by Sen. Mitch
McConnell (R-KY) and Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD).
“I’ve also told them—and I think they believe me—that we can do this the
easy way or the hard way. The easy way is I give my consent, and the hard
way is I don’t,” the senator said, adding that he’s put forward alternative
language to require a study and report on state regulatory models for hemp
that could inform future revisions to the federal law.
“We think they should study what’s going on in the states,” he said.
However, it remains uncertain whether leadership or other lawmakers
negotiating the appropriations legislation will go along with that plan
instead of the ban.
“If they are pressed for time and they want to speed up time, they might
give me what I want, which is a report, non-binding, and we read, we
discuss the issue over the next several years to find out what’s
acceptable,” Paul said. “If they don’t care and they just roll over me,
which is a possibility, they’re essentially going to ban hemp.”
🌾 Join Senator @RandPaul to defend American hemp farmers!
📅 Tuesday, October 28th ⏰
Nationwide efforts to roll back the 2018 Farm Bill are threatening American
livelihoods. It's time to stand together and GET INVOLVED.
Register: https://t.co/5fTWz1RWUh#SaveHemp pic.twitter.com/mZDktshML0
— Hemp Industry & Farmers of America (@hifa_health) October 24, 2025
Specifically, he said the opposition’s proposal would set the THC limit for
hemp “so low that there won’t be any hemp products probably left to be
sold.” He also made the case that, under the language he’s reviewed from
McConnell and Harris, it’s possible that even hemp plants grown for
industrial purposes could get caught up in the prohibition, forcing farmers
to be “re-hybridized to meet a new standard.”
“I think most of the hemp that is sold would not meet this standard. But,
then again, is there going to be money around for people to redo the hemp
plants? What’s going to need to be done if the hemp products are illegal?”
he said.
Paul also noted that, while the hemp ban language was removed on the Senate
floor prior to passage of a combined package of three appropriations bills
into a minibus that’s now a focus of bicameral negotiations, the House
version that still contains the hemp ban language has only advanced out of
committee in the chamber.
“Technically, they shouldn’t be allowed to put hemp language in at all,” he
said. “But if you know anything about Washington, breaking the rules or
making up the rules as we go is what often happens. So even though these
people have acknowledged to me they shouldn’t do this—that it’s against the
rules—they’re going to do it anyway. So this is what we’ve been debating.”
The senator repeatedly emphasized to stakeholders and supporters the
importance of directly contacting committee leadership, their congressional
representatives and particularly McConnell to drive home the point that the
proposed ban would jeopardize their jobs and livelihoods,
“Senator McConnell and Representative Harris are the two people that are
driving this issue,” he said. “They are driving the numbers, that will
eliminate the industry. Most of the other people I’ve talked to are you
happy to take the report” Paul proposed in his amendment.
“Everybody else I’ve talked to would say, ‘Oh, we’ll be fine with the
study,'” he said. “You know, let’s study this and not ruin the whole
industry. Some of them are saying they’re pro-hemp—they’ve been publicly
pro-hemp—but they don’t know what to do.”
“I think they’re open-minded. I don’t think they’ve made a decision, but
they’re going to be influenced by McConnell and by longstanding
relationships with him,” the senator said, unless you have “thousands of
people to get them to reevaluate this issue.”
“Most of them have said they’re open, but the default position is to let
McConnell have what he wants to have, so that there’s a real danger. That’s
what’s going to happen here,” Paul said. “There’s been no thought into
these numbers other than to kill the industry, and we have to do everything
we can to try to delay this so we can have a real, thoughtful discussion of
this over the next year or so. But there is a danger this goes south.”
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The conversation comes days after a bipartisan coalition of 39 state and
territory attorneys general called on Congress to clarify the federal
definition of hemp and impose regulations preventing the sale of
intoxicating cannabinoid products.
In August, McConnell–who ushered in the federal legalization of hemp under
the 2018 Farm Bill–took to the Senate floor to criticize those who opposed
the ban, including Paul.
Meanwhile, Paul recently filed a standalone bill that would go in the
opposite direction of the hemp ban, proposing to triple the concentration
of THC that the crop could legally contain, while addressing multiple other
concerns the industry has expressed about federal regulations.
The senator introduced the legislation, titled the Hemp Economic
Mobilization Plan (HEMP) Act, in June. It mirrors versions he’s sponsored
over the last several sessions.
The post GOP Senator Threatens To Block Bills To Reopen Government If Hemp
THC Ban Moves Forward appeared first on Marijuana Moment.













