Former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura said shortly after Tuesday night's elections that Gov. Tim Walz assured him that "one of the first items" on Walz's second-term agenda is legalization of marijuana, now that DFLers have full control of the Legislature.
Ventura made the disclosure Wednesday on a podcast he cohosts with his son, Tyrel, as they touched on topics connected to election results in Minnesota and across the country.
"I will let it out tonight, what the heck," said Ventura, who was elected governor in 1999 under the Reform Party banner and served one four-year-term. "The governor reassured me that one of the first items that will be passed in Minnesota — get ready — cannabis is going to have its prohibition lifted. Well, that's the news I got today."
Ventura told the Star Tribune on Friday that because he had endorsed Walz's re-election, the governor called him Wednesday to thank him.
"That was one of many reasons why I endorsed Gov. Walz," Ventura said. "He would legalize cannabis, whereas Republicans are the ones stopping it."
Tuesday's election results narrowly shifted control of the state Senate from the Republicans to the DFL, which also retained its majority in the House. This gives the DFL governor a more friendly legislative path to legalize marijuana, a path that hasn't existed since he took office in 2019.
The DFL-controlled House, with some Republican votes, passed a bill in 2021 to legalize recreational marijuana for those 21 and older. However, the bill never received a vote in the GOP-led Senate.
"We are lagging far behind the rest of the country," Ventura said Friday.