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Is marijuana moving to Schedule III now?
Not yet. Federal agencies must complete a formal rulemaking process before any rescheduling takes effect.
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Can the Drug Enforcement Administration ignore an executive order?
No, but President Trump’s executive order does not require the agency to reach a specific outcome. The DEA must follow administrative procedures and justify its final decision under the law.
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Can cannabis companies stop paying 280E taxes immediately?
No. Internal Revenue Code Section 280E relief would begin only after a final rule is published and takes effect.
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Does Schedule III allow interstate cannabis commerce?
No. Interstate commerce remains prohibited unless Congress passes additional legislation.
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Will cannabis products be FDA-approved under Schedule III?
Not automatically. FDA approval still requires clinical trials and regulatory review.
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Will rescheduling help medical marijuana patients?
Indirectly. It could expand research, normalize prescribing frameworks, and encourage insurer participation—but it does not mandate coverage.
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How will rescheduling affect hemp and CBD?
Trump’s executive order urges Congress to preserve access to full-spectrum CBD, but FDA rules and recent federal hemp legislation may limit what products qualify.
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Can Congress block rescheduling?
Yes. Lawmakers could attempt to overturn the process under the Congressional Review Act or pass legislation restricting agency authority.
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What happens if courts get involved?
Legal challenges could delay or overturn rescheduling if procedural flaws or bias are demonstrated during the rulemaking process.
