Michigan Court Upholds New Cannabis Wholesale Tax

A Michigan State Court of Claims judge has ruled that the stateโ€™s new cannabis tax provisions can proceed despite legal challenges raised by the industry, WWMT reports.

Lawmakers approved the new 24% wholesale cannabis tax in October with the governorโ€™s support. The Michigan Cannabis Industry Association (MICIA) later filed a lawsuit challenging the provision, which is set to take effect on January 1. The plaintiffs argued that the tax violates the stateโ€™s voter-approved cannabis legalization law because the 2018 policy โ€” which calls for a 10% excise tax on retail sales โ€” can only be modified by voters or a supermajority vote by lawmakers. Meanwhile, state attorneys argued that the wholesale cannabis tax is distinct from the voter-approved legalization policy and not a violation of the stateโ€™s Constitution.

In his Tuesday ruling, Court of Claims Judge Sima Patel rejected the plaintiffsโ€™ motions for a preliminary injunction, which would have prevented the policy from taking effect.

โ€œWe donโ€™t believe the court of claims made the right call. While weโ€™re deeply frustrated by this ruling, I can tell you this: the fight is far from over.โ€ โ€” MICIA Spokesperson Rose Tantraphol,via WWMT

Lawmakers approved the wholesale cannabis tax to fund

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