US Senate hopeful Jeff Jackson of North Carolina calls to end federal weed prohibition
North Carolina state Sen. Jeff Jackson is all about going green.
In a recent video posted to Twitter, he clarifies it's about making marijuana legal.
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Jackson is a Democrat who currently represents Mecklenburg County in the state senate and is running for North Carolina's second seat in the U.S. Senate.
He says North Carolina needs to get up to speed with the other 17 states that have made similar moves, NBC affiliate WCNC reports.
He specifically cites Virginia, which has opted to regulate weed like alcohol and tobacco. Jackson says that approach is good for farmers, tax revenue and the criminal justice system in the states that have chosen to greenlight legal marijuana.
"You haven't seen an increase in crime, you haven't seen an increase in the use of harder drugs," he said. "What you've seen is an increase in tax revenue and a decrease in low-level arrests."
Jackson says most of the arrests made revolving around marijuana dealt with possession of small amounts of it, usually less than half of an ounce. Most charges were dismissed, but he argues it makes more sense to make access to weed a regulated space.
For Jackson, regulating weed means striking it at the federal level. Marijuana is currently a Schedule I controlled substance, and taking it off the schedule would allow states to decriminalize and legalize marijuana.
He also called for the expungement of records for people who had prior weed-related convictions, WCNC reported.
Jackson's call for federal-level action comes in the middle of his U.S. Senate campaign.
He faces a full field of competitors already; five Republicans — including former North Carolina governor and former Charlotte mayor Pat McCrory — are in the running. Rep. Ted Budd already has former President Donald Trump's sought-after endorsement.
Four other Democrats are also vying for the seat, including Cheri Beasley, the former chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court.