Call Senator Kapenga – Hold a Public Hearing

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Sen. Chris Kapenga’s Anti-Cannabis Crusade Just Hit a Wall — And It’s Time for Voters to Push Back

Earlier this year came the most unexpected development: Kapenga was removed from Senate leadership, voted out, replaced by Senator Mary Felzkowski—someone widely known and respected for supporting cannabis reform.

For years, Senator Chris Kapenga has been one of the loudest and most persistent opponents of cannabis reform in Wisconsin. Every session, every news cycle, every chance he gets, Kapenga jumps onto his social media soapbox to declare that marijuana is dangerous, harmful, or morally wrong. But this legislative session brought a twist: not only did Kapenga continue his crusade, he actually sponsored a bill (SB 499) to ban hemp products—a move that mirrors federal prohibition language and directly threatens Wisconsin’s thriving hemp economy.

Republican Legislators in Wisconsin attack hemp
A few Republican Legislators in Wisconsin attack hemp

What’s even more striking is that while Kapenga doubled down on prohibition, his own party began moving in the opposite direction. Two separate Republican-backed bills were introduced this session (SB 681/AB 606 BAD & SB 682/AB747 GOOD) to regulate hemp-derived cannabis products responsibly—acknowledging the industry’s economic value and the need for consumer safety. Democrats also introduced their own comprehensive hemp regulation bill, SB 644.

That shift says a lot. Even in the GOP, even in conservative districts, even among lawmakers who might not personally consume or support cannabis—everyone can see where the issue is heading. Except Kapenga.

Where the two Republican bills landed in which committees is a whole other saga and soap opera in the making, but….

senate bill 644 wi intoxicating hemp product regulatoin bill for 2025 26
Senate Bill 644 WI – Democrats legislation for intoxicating hemp product regulation for 2025-26

where did the Democratic bill end up in the Senate?
Right in Kapenga’s Senate committee, chaired by someone who has historically opposed every form of cannabis reform imaginable. It’s almost poetic: he’s spent years trying to shut this conversation down, yet now the reform legislation lands squarely on his desk.

The fact the the Republican Senate sent the Democrats bill to die by the hands of Kapenga maybe a sign, but when you add that the Republican Senate sent the rest of the hemp bills to a friendly committee, the sign might be more of a FU to Kapenga vs and FU to Democrats. Oh yeah, Senate Republicans sent Kapenga’s bill to ban the hemp to committee Testin is chair, the final finger in the chapter.

Where Activists Come In

Kapenga is up for re-election in 2026, and while he represents a solidly Republican district, that doesn’t mean voters should accept stale leadership or outdated thinking. If he continues pushing prohibition while blocking reasonable regulation supported by both parties, he deserves a primary challenge. A competitive primary is often the only thing that forces entrenched politicians to actually listen to their constituents.

And constituents should be heard.
Legislators work for the public. Contacting them—respectfully but persistently—is a fundamental part of democracy. If Sen. Kapenga is going to position himself as the chief obstacle to hemp and cannabis regulation, then constituents have every right to call his office, ask hard questions, and demand accountability for the economic harm his policies threaten. We all should call him and ask him to hold a public hearing on Senate Bill 644, that I know for sure.

His public posts make his views crystal clear. Your calls and emails can make your views just as clear.

senator chris kapenga (r)
Call to Action! Senator Chris Kapenga (R)

Sen. Kapenga’s official page: facebook.com/SenatorKapenga

Telephone: (608) 266-9174 Email: Sen.Kapenga@legis.wisconsin.gov

Wisconsin deserves forward-thinking leadership, not outdated prohibitionism. If the bipartisan momentum toward sensible hemp regulation continues—and the public keeps speaking up—Kapenga may find that he’s no longer the immovable object he thinks he is.

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