People familiar with the recommendation, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland would tell the White House Office of Management and Budget on Tuesday that the government should change the drug’s classification. After the office assesses the recommendation, it would still face a long road before taking effect, including being subject to public comment.
The Associated Press earlier reported the Justice Department decision.
For more than half a century, marijuana has been considered a Schedule I drug, classified on the same level as highly addictive substances like heroin that the Drug Enforcement Administration describes as having no currently accepted medical use. Moving marijuana to Schedule III, as the Department of Health and Human Services recommended in August, would put it alongside less addictive substances like Tylenol with codeine, ketamine and testosterone, meaning that it would be subject to fewer restrictions on production and research, and that it could be prescribed by a doctor.
The decision to recommend changing the status of marijuana came despite concerns from Anne Milgram, the administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, which has long relied on federal research and data to support these decisions, according to a law enforcement official familiar with the matter.
White House officials have privately acknowledged the political benefit of easing marijuana restrictions: It could energize younger voters dissatisfied with the White House and please criminal justice advocates who have pressed Mr. Biden to overhaul the nation’s drug policy.
While Mr. Biden has been slow to embrace such a change, he has for years said that designating marijuana on the same level as heroin or LSD made little sense. He hinted that change could soon be coming during his State of the Union address in March; about a week later, Vice President Kamala Harris said that the D.E.A. must reassess marijuana “as quickly as possible.”