Cunningham Would Legalize Marijuana If Elected SC Governor
MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. — Joe Cunningham β the former one-term Democratic congressman now running to unseat South Carolina Republican Gov. Henry McMaster β is pushing for medicinal and recreational legalization of marijuana, changes he says would offer health care options and spin off millions in tax revenue for state coffers.
βThis is going to be a game changer in South Carolina,β Cunningham told The Associated Press last week, several days ahead of Mondayβs official rollout of his marijuana plan. βThere are so many reasons why we need to do this, and the time is now.β
To Cunningham, legalization solves multiple problems: freeing up police to focus on violent criminals, providing a treatment alternative for those who are terminally or chronically ill, and generating millions for a state he says is βdead lastβ in areas where funding has been a struggle, like education and health care.
He would also expunge criminal records for low-level marijuana-related crimes, giving a second chance to people βwhose lives have been ruined over a bag of marijuana,β Cunningham said.
It would be a tough task, though, in South Carolina, where the office of governor holds limited constitutional power, and the GOP holds a super majority in both legislative chambers. A Democrat has not won the Governorβs Mansion in more than two decades, so Cunningham would not only have to win over Republicans at the ballot box, but also in the state Legislature, where β despite years of debate β lawmakers have only passed one marijuana-related bill, allowing prescriptions for products with CBD, a hemp component that alone does not cause a βhigh.β
Cunningham, 39, was primed to become one of the Democratic Partyβs rising stars after 2018, when he became the first in decades to flip a South Carolina congressional seat from red to blue. Two years later, he narrowly lost the 1st Congressional District to Republican Nancy Mace on an election night that amounted to GOP wins across South Carolina, aided in no small part by former President Donald Trumpβs name atop ballots in a state where his popularity has stayed high.
But itβs that 2018 victory to which Cunningham points when asked how he plans to win both the governorship and lawmakersβ buy in, saying that heβs been the underdog before β and that his stance is buoyed by public opinion, citing anecdotal support from campaign stops around the state.
βThis is something the people want,β Cunningham said. βIf our politicians arenβt reflecting the will of the people, then we have to change out the politicians, starting with Governor McMaster.β
Surveys in recent years have also shown increasing support for medicinal marijuana in South Carolina. Itβs part of a national softening on the issue, even in other conservative states, with legalization measures cruising to victory last year in states across the political spectrum.
βPeople are behind it, and politicians need to get behind it, too,β said Cunningham, who says he has used marijuana in the past and voted for a marijuana decriminalization bill a month before departing the U.S. House.
During a news conference Monday with Cunningham, Bill Nettles β South Carolinaβs former U.S. Attorney who now advocates for marijuana legalization β pointed to medical cannabis laws in other conservative states like West Virginia.
βThis isnβt one of those wacky ideas thatβs come in from out west,β Nettles said.
During South Carolinaβs debates on marijuana, authorities including State Law Enforcement Division Chief Mark Keel, the stateβs top law enforcement officer, have testified against legalization, arguing that marijuana remains federally prohibited. Saying dozens of states have already acted on legalization,
Cunningham said his plan would help Keel do his job by freeing up officers to focus on more serious criminals.
βHis job is to enforce the law,β Cunningham said. βAnd what weβre going to be doing is changing the law to prioritize where those resources are spent.β
Still nearly a year out from South Carolinaβs gubernatorial primaries, Cunningham is making his case alongside two other Democrats in the race thus far. State Sen. Mia McLeod launched her own bid earlier this year, telling the AP she was not afraid to spar with fellow Democrats. Activist Gary Votour has also filed paperwork to run.
Last week, Cunningham announced that he had raised $634,000 in the two months since his launch, a new record for a South Carolina Democratic gubernatorial challenger in their debut fundraising quarter. According to online filings, McLeod brought in $104,000 since her launch last month.
On marijuana, Cunningham acknowledged the complexity of the issue but said his proposal is a way to take advantage of what he sees as an inevitable wave of change across the country.
βItβs money weβre passing up,β Cunningham said. βIβm not going to be the governor who sits on his hands.β
