KY gov blasts GOP leader over medical cannabis prosecution comments: ‘Complete lack of humanity’

🌎 Resumen en español · traducción automática

Kentucky legalizó la marihuana medicinal en 2023 y comenzó a otorgar licencias a cultivadores, procesadores y dispensarios el año pasado. El gobernador Andy Beshear criticó duramente al líder republicano Jason Nemes por sugerir que se enjuicie a las agencias que cooperen con la expansión de condiciones médicas calificadas para el cannabis, calificando los comentarios como "una completa falta de humanidad" y un "nuevo récord bajo". Nemes había pedido al Fiscal General Russell Coleman que asegurara que las agencias no cooperen con la orden ejecutiva del gobernador de junio que amplía las condiciones médicas para las prescripciones de marihuana medicinal.

Traducción y resumen generados por IA a partir del artículo en inglés. Puede contener errores; consulte el texto original.

Kentucky legalized medical marijuana in 2023 and began licensing growers, processors and dispensaries last year. (Getty Images)

A Republican leader who said agencies cooperating with an “unlawful expansion” of qualifying conditions for medical cannabis should be prosecuted reached “a new record low” with the comments, Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday. 

This came days after Kentucky House Majority Whip Jason Nemes asked Attorney General Russell Coleman to help ensure agencies “not cooperate” with Beshear’s expansion of qualifying conditions for medical marijuana prescriptions, which he did via executive order in early June.

Majority Whip Rep. Jason Nemes, R-Middletown, testifying in front of the House Health Services Committee. March 5, 2026. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Sarah Ladd)

“I would say to the Governor, and to everyone who supports this: You are jeopardizing the program in its entirety because this General Assembly is not playing around when we say we want the tightest medical marijuana program in the country,” Nemes said on Tuesday during an interim legislative committee meeting. 

During his weekly press conference Thursday, Beshear said he was “surprised” by “an attack from one lawmaker who called on the Attorney General to prosecute people dying of a terminal illness for securing medical cannabis. I mean, that’s a complete lack of humanity.”  

The Lantern notified a House Republican spokeswoman of the comments around 1:30 p.m. and will update this story with any response it receives. 

“I mean, an individual with ALS, you want to prosecute. And that is certainly not leadership, and even for that individual, is a new record low,” Beshear said. “Let me say this: Sometimes we see people make these threats, and in this current culture, I think they think it’s masculinity, but masculinity isn’t the bully on the playground. It’s being the person that stands between the bully and the person they’re picking on.” 

“That’s my job,” Beshear added, “to stand in between those bullies and these individuals that have these very serious conditions that are saying ‘just give me something that isn’t addictive, that isn’t opioids, and that can help me.’”  

In Nemes’ Tuesday comments, he said the governor had “skirted that law” by signing an executive order after the General Assembly declined to expand conditions that allow Kentuckians to get medical cannabis. 

He specifically said “any organization — any licensee — that participates” in the expansion should be at risk. He didn’t mention patients.  

In 2023, the legislature legalized medical marijuana for Kentuckians suffering from chronic illnesses including ​any type or form of cancer, chronic or severe pain, epilepsy or other intractable seizure disorder; multiple sclerosis, muscle spasms, or spasticity; chronic nausea or cyclical vomiting syndrome; or post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

GOP leader says KY agencies that go along with medical cannabis order ‘should be prosecuted’

In early June, Beshear said the law suffered from a “lack of clarity.” He signed an executive order directing the Office of Medical Cannabis to issue an emergency regulation clarifying that Kentuckians have access to medical cannabis if they have these additional conditions: Terminal illness, sickle cell anemia, ALS, Parkinson’s disease, HIV, AIDS, Huntington’s disease, muscular dystrophy, wasting syndrome, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, neuropathies, severe arthritis, fibromyalgia and glaucoma. 

This story may be updated. 

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