Congress Moves to Ban Legal Weed Alternatives Like Delta-8 and THCA
Something’s Burning in Washington, and It’s Not Just Weed.
It didn’t make the evening news. There was no prime-time press conference. But with the quiet stroke of a pen in a subcommittee hearing room, House Republicans just set in motion one of the most aggressive crackdowns on legal cannabis products in modern U.S. history.
Tucked deep inside a must-pass federal spending bill, a newly introduced amendment would redefine “hemp” at the federal level, banning nearly every form of hemp-derived THC on the market, including popular compounds like delta‑8, THCA, and THC‑O. If passed, the bill would gut a $4.3 billion legal industry overnight, criminalize thousands of small businesses, and roll back hard-won ground on cannabis reform, not with debate, but with a budget trick.
This isn’t just about weed. It’s about power, about process. About whether lawmakers can erase an entire sector of the economy by quietly redrawing definitions when no one’s looking.
And it’s about whether the same party that championed hemp legalization just a few years ago is now weaponizing “public safety” to torch the very market it helped build.
Let’s break down how we got here, who stands to lose everything, and why this fight isn’t just about cannabis; it’s about whether democracy still has rules.
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Flashback: How We Got Legal Hemp in the First Place
To understand how Congress is now trying to ban hemp-derived THC products, you have to go back to 2018, when lawmakers, including many of the same Republicans pushing this new ban, were celebrating hemp as the next great cash crop for struggling rural economies.
That year, the 2018 Farm Bill was signed into law with bipartisan support. It federally legalized hemp, defining it as cannabis with less than 0.3% delta‑9 THC by dry weight. This was a breakthrough moment: hemp could be grown, processed, and sold legally across state lines for the first time in nearly a century.
But here’s the catch: the law only specified delta‑9 THC, the primary intoxicating compound in traditional marijuana. It said nothing about delta‑8, delta‑10, THC‑O, THCA, or other cannabinoids that can have similar effects, mainly when synthesized or extracted from hemp plants.
That loophole wasn’t an accident. It was a mix of legal ambiguity, scientific lag, and political compromise that led to the bill's passage. But entrepreneurs saw the gap, and so did chemists. By mid-2020, hemp-derived THC products were being sold legally in gas stations, vape shops, and even grocery stores in dozens of states, without the heavy taxes or regulations imposed on marijuana in adult-use states.
These compounds weren’t “legal weed.” They were something more complicated: chemically similar, functionally intoxicating, and totally unregulated. They exploded in popularity, particularly in red states where marijuana remains illegal.
For many farmers, this was a lifeline. For many consumers, especially veterans and chronic pain patients, it was a low-cost, accessible alternative. For state and federal regulators? It became a gray-market wildfire they’ve been trying to contain ever since.
And now, instead of regulating it, Congress is trying to erase it.
The Ambush: What the New House Bill Actually Does
The bill doesn’t say “ban hemp.” It doesn’t have a big red warning label. It doesn’t even come from the House Judiciary or Energy & Commerce Committees, the ones that typically deal with drug policy. Instead, this bombshell is buried in a spending bill.
More specifically, the FY2026 Agriculture, Rural Development, FDA, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill was introduced and advanced by Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) and other House Republicans on June 5, 2025.
The key provision? A quiet rewrite of the 2018 Farm Bill's definition of hemp.
Where the old law defined hemp as cannabis with less than 0.3% delta‑9 THC by dry weight, this new version changes that standard to account for all forms of THC, including THCA, a non-psychoactive compound that converts into THC when heated, and any synthetic or converted cannabinoids like delta‑8, delta‑10, and THC‑O.
But it goes further. It states that any hemp product with a "quantifiable amount" of THC, not just delta‑9, would no longer be considered legal hemp. That change would instantly criminalize thousands of products currently sold legally in dozens of states.
This isn’t targeted enforcement. It’s a scorched-earth policy.
Under this language, even non-intoxicating products like full-spectrum CBD oils or raw hemp flower with trace THCA could be made illegal at the federal level, regardless of whether a state has legalized them or not.
And how is it being done? Not through open debate. Not with expert testimony, but through a must-pass funding bill that few Americans will ever read.
"We are closing the loophole," Rep. Harris said during the subcommittee markup. He called delta‑8 and related products “unregulated intoxicants” that threaten public health, although no national health crisis has been attributed to these compounds.
Let’s be clear: if this becomes law, the federal government won’t just be regulating intoxicating hemp. It will be redefining an entire industry out of existence, without public input, without a vote on a standalone bill, and without accountability.
Collateral Damage: Who Gets Crushed
They say this is about public safety. But make no mistake, if this bill passes, the bodies will be economic.
The victims aren’t cartel kingpins or black-market chemists. They’re veterans selling CBD out of a storefront in Georgia. Rural hemp farmers in Kentucky who planted legal crops instead of opioids. Mothers in Kansas who use THCA to treat their kids’ seizures. Latino-owned beverage startups in California are brewing delta‑9 seltzers under state law.
All of them were wiped out overnight.
According to industry data, the hemp-derived cannabinoid market is worth more than $4.3 billion annually, supporting tens of thousands of jobs. This isn’t shadowy gray-market nonsense. This is legal commerce, operating in broad daylight, taxed by states, and often licensed under local rules.
The new bill doesn’t discriminate. It nukes the entire sector, whether you're selling responsibly or recklessly.
And it’s not just businesses. Consumers will also pay the price.
Chronic pain patients who can't afford medical marijuana cards but rely on delta‑8 for relief.
Veterans with PTSD, turned off by opioids and alcohol, now facing a return to black-market guesswork.
Parents of epileptic children, once able to legally access THCA flower, now told it's a Schedule I drug again.
All of this, done in the name of “safety,” while leaving actual marijuana prohibition untouched in dozens of states.
What this bill proposes isn't harm reduction. It's economic arson disguised as regulation.
"We finally found something that worked for my husband’s anxiety and pain — and now they want to take it away like we’re criminals?" — Marla J., wife of a disabled Army veteran and CBD shop co-owner in North Carolina
This is a purge engineered by the very people who once sold hemp as a lifeline for small businesses.
But why would they turn on their own?
Let’s talk about the politics.
The Strange Bedfellows Behind the Crackdown
If you’re looking for villains in this story, don’t expect a lineup of hardened prohibitionists. The truth is weirder and a hell of a lot more revealing.
At the center of it all is Rep. Andy Harris (R‑MD), an anesthesiologist turned budget hawk. However, surprisingly, he’s being joined by Rep. Dave Joyce (R-OH), co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, and Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA), Chair of the House Agriculture Committee. Together, they’re backing a bill that effectively kills the very industry they helped legalize.
Why? Political optics and industry pressure.
Some lawmakers are facing heat from sheriffs, religious groups, and conservative base voters who’ve grown alarmed by the surge of hemp-derived intoxicants. Meanwhile, marijuana multistate operators (MSOs) and alcohol lobbies are privately pushing to eliminate competition from unregulated hemp products.
“We’re not going to win market share if gas station weed keeps undercutting us,” one cannabis CEO told Politico.
So here we are: the party of deregulation teaming up with corporate monopolists to kneecap a legal, decentralized, and largely small-business-driven industry.
This isn’t policymaking. It’s a protection racket in legislative form.
And the most cynical part? They’re doing it through a spending bill because it’s faster, quieter, and harder to stop.
Opposition Frontlines: Who’s Fighting Back
The resistance is growing. The question now is whether it can grow fast enough, because the clock is ticking.
At the front of the fight is the U.S. Hemp Roundtable, calling the provision a “blatant attack” on an industry built in good faith under existing federal law. They’ve been joined by:
The Hemp Beverage Alliance, warning it would destroy a promising, regulated market.
The Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of America, alarmed that Congress would override state authority.
Veterans advocacy groups that know what’s at stake for patients and pain management.
Every Democrat on the House Appropriations Subcommittee voted no. Some Republicans are now hearing from hemp entrepreneurs in their home districts and beginning to squirm.
Legal scholars warn that this could trigger states’ rights lawsuits, especially in states like Minnesota and Kentucky, which already regulate these products.
“We’ve had years to create rules and regulations. Now suddenly it’s a crisis? That’s not leadership — that’s sabotage.” — State Rep. Marcus Hayes (R‑GA)
They’re about to find out how loud the hemp economy can get.
What’s Next & How to Fight It
This fight isn’t theoretical. It’s happening right now.
The bill will next be considered by the full Appropriations Committee, followed by a vote on the House floor. If it passes with this provision intact, the hemp-derived cannabinoid market could be illegal nationwide before most Americans even realize what happened.
If you're pissed off, you should be.
But there’s still time.
Call your representative. Email your senator.
Capitol Switchboard: 📞 (202) 224-3121
Find your rep here“Hi, my name is [Your Name], and I’m a constituent from [City/State]. I’m calling to demand that [Rep/Senator Name] oppose the hemp-derived THC ban language in the FY2026 agriculture spending bill…”
Share this story. Light up inboxes, because this isn’t the first time a government tried to rewrite reality by decree. Unless we stop it now, it won’t be the last.
We’ve seen this movie before.
A War Rebooted: From Prohibition to Now
In 1920, the United States attempted to legislate morality by banning alcohol. The result? Black markets, corruption, and violent monopolies flourished until Congress finally admitted the mistake.
Today, we’re witnessing the same authoritarian impulse resurface through a technicality, rather than a public vote.
But this time, it’s faster. Sneakier. And aimed at legal, regulated compounds already in use by millions of law-abiding people.
This isn’t policy. It’s prohibition in a business suit.
It threatens not just cannabis reform, but the very principle that Congress should act in the open. It’s a warning that definitions can be changed, rights can be rewritten, and entire industries can vanish with the stroke of a pen buried in a PDF.
Let’s make sure this one doesn’t.
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Bibliography:
“US Lawmakers Aim to Close Hemp, THCA ‘Loophole’ in New Budget Proposal.” Cannabis Business Times, June 5, 2025.
“Congressional Committee Approves Bill To Ban All Hemp Products With THC.” Marijuana Moment, June 5, 2025.
“Federal Budget Proposal Would Ban Hemp‑Derived THC, THCA Flower.” MJBizDaily, June 4, 2025; updated June 6, 2025.
Gordon, Rachelle. “Feds Threaten Nationwide Hemp THC Ban.” GreenState, June 5, 2025.
“Texas Votes to Outlaw Most Hemp Products, Potentially Crippling Market.” Politico, May 22, 2025.
“2018 Farm Bill.” Wikipedia.
I'm not a fan of cannabis myself. Don't care for it's effects on me. BUT, on behalf of my neighbors who get benefit from it, and small businesses that grow it or sell it, I'm phoning my senators and congressperson to say "Throttle this provision! "
I am going to respectfully--very respectfully--disagree. The 2018 loophole was a massive error with serious unintended consequences. I wrote about this six months ago for Newsweek. Closing the loophole Is a good idea: https://www.newsweek.com/we-legalized-our-sins-now-they-are-coming-back-bite-us-opinion-1998154