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Senator Blocks Confirmation Of Trump’s ‘Unqualified’ White House Drug Czar Pick Who Has Voiced Medical Marijuana Support
Dec 5, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
A Democratic senator is holding up nearly 90 of President Donald Trump’s
administrative nominees—including the president’s pick for White House drug
czar who he says is among many “unqualified” candidates who threaten to
“undermine the rule of law and our national security.”
The Senate Judiciary Committee in October advanced the nomination of Sara
Carter Bailey to join the administration as director of the Office of
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP). But when she was included in a en
bloc confirmation package of 88 nominees for floor consideration, Sen.
Michael Bennet (D-CO) raised a procedural inquiry that led Republicans to
stop the vote.
“I just blocked 88 Trump nominees from confirmation—including Sara Carter
Bailey, a former Fox News contributor nominated to be our country’s drug
czar,” Bennet said on the floor on Thursday. “Bailey was nominated by
Trump, who just pardoned the former president of Honduras, as he served 45
years in prison for conspiring to distribute over 400 tons of cocaine.”
“I will not allow unqualified nominees, this White House, or the president
to undermine the rule of law and our national security,” he said.
The procedural complaint Bennet raised has to do with the fact that ONDCP
director is a “level I” executive position.
As such, unlike the other nominees in the package, Bailey was ineligible to
be included in the group vote—which the Republican senator presiding over
the body on Thursday acknowledged.
Trump tried to jam through 88 unqualified nominees including a Fox News
talking head to run America’s drug policy. I blocked the nominations, and
I’m running for Governor to bring that same backbone and respect for the
rule of law to Colorado. https://t.co/8aPEIpSrYr
— Michael Bennet (@MichaelBennet) December 4, 2025
Bailey, for her part, has voiced support for medical cannabis, while
stating that she doesn’t have a “problem” with legalization, even if she
might not personally agree with the policy.
A former journalist known for her coverage of drug cartels, Bailey also
recently advised senators that the administration is keeping “all options”
on the table as it continues to consider a pending marijuana rescheduling
proposal, while describing cannabis reform as a “bipartisan issue.”
My statement on blocking 88 Trump nominees on the Senate floor:
pic.twitter.com/jRQNdfEefv
— Michael Bennet (@SenatorBennet) December 4, 2025
Bennet isn’t the only senator to question the nominee’s qualifications.
Ahead of the October committee vote, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL), the panel’s
ranking member, called Bailey a Trump “loyalist” who was “nominated for a
position for which she is totally, wholly unqualified.”
“She is not a physician or addiction specialist,” he said. “She has never
been a prosecutor nor a law enforcement official.”
Given the role of the ONDCP director in setting and carrying out the
administrative agenda on drug policy issues, the fact that Bailey has gone
on the record enthusiastically endorsing medical cannabis in the past is
welcome news for advocates.
Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) separately raised the issue of cannabis
rescheduling with the nominee in September, stating that the proposal to
move marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances
Act (CSA) would represents a “step in the right direction.”
“It would open up the door to more scientific study, and so I’m wondering
if you were confirmed, how would you advise the American president about
the ongoing rescheduling process?” he asked.
Bailey said she shares Booker’s passion for the issue, which she
characterized as “bipartisan.”
“If confirmed as director, I will comply with all federal laws and fulfill
all statutory responsibilities of the ONDCP,” she said. “However, we will
continue to work extensively with research and data. We will continue to do
that and explore all options.”
Trump endorsed rescheduling—as well as marijuana industry banking access
and a Florida legalization ballot initiative–on the campaign trail ahead of
his second term. But his most recent comments in late August about the
timeline for a rescheduling decision gave a more ambiguous impression of
his position on the issue.
While Bailey has spoken often about various marijuana policy
issues—focusing attention on illicit trafficking and illegal grow
operations on U.S. land, for example—her public comments on how she
personally feels about the topic have been limited. What she did say last
year in an episode of her podcast, The Sara Carter Show, signaled that she
draws a distinction between legally regulated and illicitly supplied
marijuana.
“I don’t have any problem if it’s legalized and it’s monitored,” she said.
“I mean, I may have my own issues of how I feel about that, but I do
believe that cannabis for medicinal purposes and medical reasons is a
fantastic way of handling—especially for people with cancer and other
illnesses, you know—of handling the illness and the side effects of the
medication and those illnesses. So I’m not saying we’ve gotta make it
illegal.”
If Bailey is ultimately confirmed by the Senate, she will become the second
drug czar in a row who has voiced support for medical marijuana, following former
President Joe Biden’s ONDCP director Rahul Gupta, who worked as a
consultant for a cannabis businesses and also oversaw implementation of
West Virginia’s medical marijuana program.
On her social media, Bailey has previously shared links—without
commentary—to news stories about a variety of marijuana-related issues. In
addition to her focus on illicit cartel grows, she’s also posted about
congressional and state-level legalization votes, staffers in the Biden
administration being fired over past cannabis use, Democratic presidential
candidates’ support for legalization, the advancement of cannabis banking
legislation in Congress and state policy developments such as Alaska’s
legalization of cannabis cafes.
Federal statute dictates the drug czar is prohibited from endorsing the
legalization of Schedule I drugs in the CSA, including marijuana.
“The Director…shall ensure that no Federal funds appropriated to the Office
of National Drug Control Policy shall be expended for any study or contract
relating to the legalization (for a medical use or any other use) of a
substance listed in schedule I of section 812 of this title and take such
actions as necessary to oppose any attempt to legalize the use of a
substance (in any form) that— (A) is listed in schedule I of section 812 of
this title; and (B) has not been approved for use for medical purposes by
the Food and Drug Administration.”
In April, however, Democratic congressional lawmakers announced the filing
of a bill that would remove that restriction. It has not yet advanced in
the GOP-controlled Congress.
Bailey has separately sounded the alarm about the risk of pesticides and
other contaminants in marijuana grown and sold by Chinese cartels—an issue
that was recently taken up by a House committee.
*— 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. —*
Last year, the nominee talked about the issue with Derek Maltz, a
then-retired Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) official who is
temporarily served as acting administrator of the agency prior to the
confirmation of Trump’s permanent pick, Terrance Cole.
In an X post about the interview with Maltz, Bailey said he exposed how
“Chinese marijuana grow operations are using hazardous chemicals as
pesticides.”
In 2022, U.S. Rep. Mike Garcia (R-CA) applauded Bailey, who worked with his
office to bring attention to illicit grow operations in his district,
leading to a local law enforcement investigation.
Bailey gave the congressman credit, saying “your work in taking down the
illegal marijuana grows has stopped cartels from exploiting your community,
those people forced to work on them and the [money].”
In an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity in 2021, she also talked about
her work with Garcia—including accompanying him on a helicopter to survey
“miles and miles and miles of vast, sophisticated illegal grows worth tens
of millions of dollars.”
Cartels have “become extremely more brazen. They’re not afraid of hiding
it,” she said. “They don’t hide it because they don’t feel that they’ll
ever be held accountable for it.”
In a sense, Bailey has seemed to implicitly suggest at multiple times that
she supports regulated access to cannabis as a means of promoting public
safety and health. Whether and how that implied position would influence
federal policy if she’s confirmed and assumes the ONDCP director role is
yet to be seen.
On her social media, she’s previously shared links—without commentary—to
news stories about a variety of marijuana-related issues. In addition to
her focus on illicit cartel grows, she’s also posted about congressional
and state-level legalization votes, staffers in the Biden administration
being fired over past cannabis use, Democratic presidential
candidates’ support for legalization, the advancement of cannabis banking
legislation in Congress and state policy developments such as
Alaska’s legalization of cannabis cafes.
*Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.*
The post Senator Blocks Confirmation Of Trump’s ‘Unqualified’ White House
Drug Czar Pick Who Has Voiced Medical Marijuana Support appeared first on Marijuana
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