A Republican congressman widely known as one of Capitol Hill’s most determined opponents of marijuana reform could face a serious electoral threat this fall as Maryland lawmakers move forward with a new congressional map that analysts say tilts sharply in Democrats’ favor.
The Maryland House of Delegates on Monday approved a redistricting proposal that would significantly reshape the state’s 1st Congressional District, potentially placing Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) at risk of losing his seat in November. Harris is currently the lone Republican in Maryland’s eight-member U.S. House delegation and has held the district since 2011.
Political observers say the revised map would give Democrats a structural advantage in a district that has historically favored Republicans, marking a notable shift from boundaries first drawn more than a decade ago. The bill, HB 488, advanced after receiving backing from a five-member gubernatorial advisory committee and now heads to the state Senate for consideration.
Under this map, MD-01 would move from Trump+17 to approximately Harris+14, making a Democratic pickup in 2026 all but certain if the plan takes effect. https://t.co/MGGb2ef7Bc
— Zachary Donnini (@ZacharyDonnini) January 20, 2026
Harris has built a national profile not just as Maryland’s sole GOP House member, but as a leading voice against cannabis reform—particularly when it comes to Washington, D.C. As chair of the House Appropriations subcommittee overseeing agriculture, rural development, the FDA and related agencies, he has been instrumental in maintaining a long-running congressional rider that blocks the District from using its own funds to establish regulated recreational marijuana sales.
That provision, often referred to by critics as the “Harris rider,” has appeared in annual federal spending bills since 2014, the same year D.C. voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot initiative legalizing adult-use cannabis. Despite repeated attempts by city leaders to work around the restriction, the rider has remained intact under both Democratic and Republican control of Congress.
Harris has indicated he would challenge the redistricting plan in court if it becomes law. Even so, advocates say his potential ouster could weaken one of the most durable barriers to cannabis reform affecting the nation’s capital.
The rider’s future may also hinge on federal marijuana policy. If the Trump administration proceeds with plans to reclassify cannabis under federal law, legal analysts say D.C. could gain new authority to regulate and tax marijuana sales—though ambiguities in existing appropriations language could still complicate that outcome.
While removing Harris would not guarantee an end to congressional interference in D.C.’s cannabis policy, reform supporters argue that losing his influence within the appropriations process could meaningfully shift the political landscape, particularly if Democrats make gains in Congress after the midterms.
Read the whole article from Marijuanamoment here.










