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Feds haven’t weighed in on Washington, Colorado pot legalization

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Colorado was a presidential swing state — a factor advocates suggest may have dissuaded President Barack Obama’s attorney general, Holder, from weighing in this time around.

“I think it’s safe to say that there were politics involved,” said Brian Vicente, co-director of the Amendment 64 campaign. “Marijuana is demonstrably more popular in Colorado than President Obama.”

The president won Colorado — but the pot measure got a greater share of the state vote.

Marijuana advocates in Washington and Colorado said they learned from the defeat of California’s Proposition 19. The two victorious measures added provisions for state regulation of recreational sales — and the first-ever standards for testing drivers for pot impairment.

“This is a maturation of the discussion on marijuana,” said Allison Holcomb, director of the New Approach Washington campaign that passed the legalization measure. “It changed the dynamic of the conversation altogether.”

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