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The House is preparing to vote on a Senate-passed spending bill that includes a ban on consumable hemp products. Attempts by Republican Representatives Paul Rand and Thomas Massie to strike the prohibition language failed. Republican Representative Morgan Griffith is voting for the underlying bill to avoid a government shutdown, despite disagreeing with the hemp ban. Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen supported the ban due to concerns about unregulated synthetic hemp products being sold to children, but suggests Congress should use the one-year before implementation to develop a regulatory framework to preserve access to safe hemp products like CBD. Advocates are also criticizing the bill for omitting bipartisan provisions allowing VA doctors to recommend medical cannabis.

House Committee Blocks Vote On GOP Lawmaker’s Amendment To Stop Hemp Ban, While Senator Floats Regulatory Alternative

Nov 12, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



As the House prepares to vote on a Senate-passed spending bill with
provisions to ban consumable hemp products, one GOP representative’s final
push to strike the prohibition language has failed. At the same time, a
Democratic senator says Congress should take the one-year before its
implementation to develop a regulatory framework to preserve legal access
to certain hemp products.

Ahead of the Senate vote on Monday, Sen. Paul Rand (R-KY) tried to
eliminate language championed by Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) to prohibit
hemp products containing THC. But while he was joined by 22 Democrats and,
notably, anti-marijuana Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in voting against a motion to
table the amendment, the majority ultimately quashed it.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) then took up the mantle, filing an amendment
mirroring Paul’s ahead of House consideration of the appropriations package.

It was not made in order for floor consideration by the House Rules
Committee, however.

I submitted 2 amendments to the CR/minibus to fix onerous provisions in it.
The rules committee allowed neither to get a vote.

One amdt mirrored @SenRandPaul’s effort to remove the hemp ban that will
devastate the industry. The other would reinstate Congressional budget
rules. pic.twitter.com/9DNNp7T4yo

— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) November 12, 2025

The prospects of its adoption were dubious at best, as there’s generally
consensus within the Republican caucus that the spending bill should
advance without further modifications that would send it back to the
Senate, renewing the risk that it’d face additional delays in getting to
the president’s desk and putting an end to an ongoing government shutdown.

Indeed, none of the other 85 amendments on separate topics filed before the
committee were allowed to advance either.

Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-VA) said at a hearing of the panel on Tuesday that
he didn’t “agree with the solution they came up with” to the hemp issue,
referring to the ban championed by McConnell and Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD).

However, “I’m voting for [the underlying bill] because I’ve got too many
people that need the government to open,” the congressman said. He added
that while there may be “great” amendments that members submitted, “I’m not
voting for any of them because we need to get this thing done—and then we
can start negotiating on other things.”

On the Senate side, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) supported the hemp ban
language in Monday’s vote, stating that he’s “concerned that existing
federal law creates the opportunity for unregulated and intoxicating
synthetic hemp products to be marketed and sold to children.”

“Current Maryland law bans these products, but without federal action, they
can still be distributed in our state. The language in the underlying bill
would close that loophole, while the Paul amendment would leave the
loophole in place,” he said.

But Van Hollen left the door open for future reforms around hemp.

The senator said Congress should use the year after enactment of the
law—before the ban is officially implemented—to “ensure a sustainable
pathway forward for safe hemp products like CBD, which many people depend
on to safely manage pain and other health conditions.”

“We ultimately need balanced, science-based regulation that preserves
access to safe products while protecting public health,” Van Hollen said.

Meanwhile, advocates are sharply criticizing congressional leaders for
advancing the spending bill ahead of Veterans Day on Tuesday that also
omits bipartisan provisions allowing U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) doctors to recommend medical cannabis to patients in states where it’s
legal—even though the policy was approved by the full Senate and House
earlier this year.

The post House Committee Blocks Vote On GOP Lawmaker’s Amendment To Stop
Hemp Ban, While Senator Floats Regulatory Alternative appeared first on Marijuana
Moment.

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