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Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signs bill restricting hemp sales

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signs bill restricting hemp sales

Yahoo14-05-2025
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WIAT) — Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signed a bill Wednesday regulating the sale and distribution of hemp products, including drinks and gummies.
Ivey signed HB445, which reduces serving sizes of THC to 10 milligrams. Establishments selling these products must be licensed by the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. The law places a 10% tax on hemp products and prohibits business from selling them to anyone who's younger than 21.
State Rep. Andy Whitt, R-Harvest, who sponsored the bill, said before the bill was signed that hemp gummies and snacks are in certain convenient stores across Alabama. He claimed some stores market gummies and snacks to children with 'dangerous THC levels.'
There was some pushback against the bill. Carmelo Parasiliti, owner of Green Acres Organic Pharms in Florence, said the bill would eliminate almost all of the products they offer. Parasiliti urged Ivey to veto the bill. As of Wednesday, a petition on Change.org garnered over 1,900 signatures requesting Ivey kill the bill.
Gov. Kay Ivey signs law banning smartphones in Alabama public schools
Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin expressed issues he had with the bills.
'This bill doesn't protect our communities — it destroys jobs, shuts down local businesses, and hands the industry to big corporations,' Woodfin said in a statement Monday.
Whitt said the bill isn't a total ban on hemp, though he acknowledged some stores will need to change their business model.
'Your convenient store, local convenient store, is not a pharmacy. It should not be viewed as one,' Whitt said. 'So they should be selling gas and snacks, not drugs to our kids.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Susan Collins' tightrope walk continues in the fight over medical research
Susan Collins' tightrope walk continues in the fight over medical research

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Susan Collins' tightrope walk continues in the fight over medical research

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 09: Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Susan Collins (R-ME) makes remarks during a hearing held to examine a future without Type 1 Diabetes with a focus on accelerating breakthroughs and creating hope at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on July 09, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo byfor Breakthrough T1D) U.S. Sen. Susan Collins drew President Donald Trump's ire last week in a departure from the unusual deference he has shown toward the Maine Republican. Trump told Republicans in a Truth Social post, 'when in doubt, vote the exact opposite' of Collins, not referencing any vote in particular. 'Generally speaking, you can't go wrong,' Trump wrote. 'Thank you for your attention to this matter and, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!' Political scientists see the jab as notable but refrained from speculating about whether it signals a shift in their relationship or Collins' political future, as she is up for reelection in 2026. Maine Republicans and Trump have rejected the idea of forcing a primary on Collins, though someone familiar with the conversation told Politico recently that the president would love to see a 'better option.' Despite the president's comment, Collins' approach to Trump hasn't changed much during his second term, said Mark Brewer, chair of the political science department at the University of Maine. Rather, Brewer said, how Maine's senior senator continues to handle disagreements with his administration illustrates that she is continuing to try to find a middle ground. 'She's been operating the way that she's, I think, consistently operated,' Brewer said. 'She'll say this publicly, when she doesn't agree with what the president's doing, she'll vote against him. Other times, if she's supportive of the policy, maybe not necessarily some of the things he does but the underlying policy, she'll vote in favor of it.' Collins has packed millions of dollars into spending bills for Maine. Will it materialize? That was exactly her response when asked about the president's criticism of her voting record. 'I cast each vote based on what is right for Maine and America,' Collins said in a statement. 'Sometimes that means I agree with the President and sometimes I disagree.' When Maine Morning Star spoke to voters this past spring about Collins' role during Trump's second term, some constituents critiqued her piecemeal approach to fighting his cuts to federal programs and funding, arguing that a focus on Trump's individual actions wouldn't be effective in deterring the president as he convoluted the federal government's system of checks and balances. That balancing act is currently being tested on an issue Collins has been a vocal proponent of: medical research. The first full hearing this Congress of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which Collins chairs, was titled 'Biomedical research: Keeping America's edge in innovation.' 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Panama deserves sanctions, not the Security Council presidency
Panama deserves sanctions, not the Security Council presidency

The Hill

time4 hours ago

  • The Hill

Panama deserves sanctions, not the Security Council presidency

This month, Panama holds the rotating presidency of the U.N. Security Council — a position that confers moral authority, policy influence and global prestige as the representative 'face' of the Council. But given Panama's longstanding and conscious role in undermining sanctions on Iran, this honor is deeply wrong and misguided. In fact, Panama should not be elevated — it should be sanctioned. A country that enables Iran's sanctions evasion should not be rewarded with the symbolic leadership of the very body charged with upholding those sanctions. Despite its protestations, Panama is neither a champion of the rules-based international order nor a true ally to the U.S. Panama's acquiescence to Chinese 'Belt and Road Initiative' ambitions in controlling the Panama Canal is only the latest sign of Panamanian duplicity that place it squarely at odds with the values and objectives of the council. For years, Panama has allowed its flag — akin to a passport for ships — to be used by vessels transporting illicit Iranian oil, the key revenue stream for a regime that continues to defy international nuclear restrictions. Panama is not ignorant or unaware of this problem. In January 2024, a bipartisan group of 31 U.S. Senators led by Senators Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Bob Casey (D-Pa.) urged the Panama Maritime Authority to 'cooperate with the United States and conduct investigations into a significant number of ships registered in Panama which are alleged to transport Iranian oil in violation of U.S. sanctions…' They sought Panama's explicit commitment to investigate some '189 Panamanian-flagged vessels of concern,' constituting ' nearly half ' of all the vessels aiding Iran. 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