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During a Virginia gubernatorial debate, candidates Abigail Spanberger (D) and Winsome Earle-Sears (R) debated marijuana policy. Spanberger supports legalization with transparency and public safety, advocating for revenue to be reinvested into communities and public schools. Earle-Sears supports medicinal marijuana but opposes a commercial market, citing concerns about employee drug use in her utility repair business and calling marijuana a gateway drug. Virginia legalized possession and cultivation in 2022, but retail sales are still forbidden due to Governor Glenn Youngkin's vetoes. A legislative commission is working on a proposal for commercial sales to be considered in the 2026 session, with some senators pushing for legalization as an alternative revenue source.

Virginia Gubernatorial Candidates Clash On Marijuana At Debate, With GOP Nominee Worrying Users Could ‘Blow Everything Up’

Oct 10, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



Candidates for Virginia governor clashed on marijuana policy at a debate on
Thursday—with the Republican nominee saying that while she supports medical
cannabis, she had a zero-tolerance policy for employee consumption as the
owner of a utility repair business.

She feared that workers who tested positive for THC while working with gas
and electricity would “blow everything up,” the GOP contender said.

During a gubernatorial debate, both gubernatorial candidates—former U.S.
Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA) and current Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears (R)—were
pressed on marijuana policy issues.

Spanberger, who supports legalization, was asked about public safety
considerations for the establishment of a potential cannabis market that
she’s pledged to support if elected. The candidate said simply that “it’s
important that there be transparency in what is available on the market.”

“As a former federal agent who worked narcotics cases, as a CIA officer who
tracked transnational criminal organizations, as the only person on stage
who’s had a bill signed into law by President Trump restricting fentanyl
flowing into our country and tightening our border security, and as the
only person on stage with the endorsement of the Police Benevolent
Association, it is extraordinarily important that we have transparency and
that there is a clear market in order to be enforced,” she said.

The moderator then directed a question at Earle-Sears, pointing out that
under the administration in which she currently serves, the governor has
twice vetoed legislation to create a commercial marijuana market in the
commonwealth, despite the enactment of legalization of possession and
cultivation by adults.

Asked whether she would take a different approach and allow for commercial
sales if presented with such a bill, the lieutenant governor said, “I
believe in medicinal marijuana. I believe it has value.”

“But, you know, I had a business—and when I had my business and my
employees came up positive for marijuana, they couldn’t work for me,” she
said. “They couldn’t drive my trucks. They couldn’t go in and repair
anything. We were working on gas. We’re working on electric. We can’t
afford to have people who are working and they don’t know what they’re
doing. They’ll blow everything up.”

Earle-Sears has staunchly opposed allowing Virginia to create a commercial
adult-use cannabis market, going so far as to say that marijuana is a
gateway drug and suggesting that legalization is “decimating communities.”

Spanberger, for her part, told Marijuana Moment last month that, “as
Virginia takes steps toward creating a legalized retail market for
cannabis,” it needs a “clear strategy to set up a market that is safe for
consumers, transparent for businesses, and fair to entrepreneurs.”

She added that it’s her stance that “revenue from commercial cannabis
products must return to Virginia communities and be reinvested for purposes
like strengthening our public schools.”

If elected, Spanberger said she will “work with leaders in the General
Assembly to find a path forward that both prioritizes public safety and
grows Virginia’s economy.”

Meanwhile, earlier this week a Virginia legislative commission convened
another meeting where lawmakers and advocates discussed plans to prepare
the state to legalize recreational marijuana sales.

Del. Paul Krizek (D), chair of the Joint Commission to Oversee the
Transition of the Commonwealth into a Cannabis Retail Market, began
Monday’s meeting by noting it would be the second-to-last for the
body—saying that at the next and final one in December, members will “go
over the bill that we are working on now.”

The plan is for the body to suggest a proposal that the full legislature
can consider passing in the 2026 session that begins in January.

Use and possession of marijuana has been legal in Virginia since 2022, but
retail sales remain forbidden—a situation that’s helped fuel a
multibillion-dollar illicit market. Despite efforts by Democrats in past
years to legalize and regulate the retail system, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R)
has stood in the way of the reform, vetoing proposals passed by lawmakers
during each of the last two sessions.

At the legislative commission’s first meeting in July, members discussing
broad regulatory considerations and other issues related to THC potency,
the hemp market and more. In August, the panel focused on cannabis taxes
and revenue.

Meanwhile, a top Democratic Virginia senator recently said the state should
move forward with legalizing recreational marijuana sales—in part to offset
the Trump administration’s cuts to federal spending in support of states.

While the legislature has twice passed bills to create a regulated
commercial cannabis market after the state legalized possession and use by
adults in 2022, Youngkin vetoed both proposals.

But with anticipated increases in spending in Virginia resulting from
various federal policy initiatives such as the withdrawal of federal
welfare dollars to states, Senate President Pro Tem Louise Lucas (D) said
it’s time to get serious about alternative revenue, which should include
legalizing marijuana sales.

*Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.*

The post Virginia Gubernatorial Candidates Clash On Marijuana At Debate,
With GOP Nominee Worrying Users Could ‘Blow Everything Up’ appeared first
on Marijuana Moment.

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