If you were hankering for a summer of legalized marijuana in Canada, you can forget it.

And you can thank Canada’s newly independent — but unelected — Senate for delays.

There is now a firm deadline for passage, but it wasn’t the deadline the Trudeau government, and some provinces, wanted.

Read more: Senate deal to vote on pot bill on June 7 means no sales before August

If this was a strictly political gambit, there are those who would finger the culprit, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, as the man who directed his Senate caucus to put the brakes on government legislation, choosing partisan battles over sober second thought.

Under a deal brokered in the Senate on Thursday, Government Leader Peter Harder dropped a threat to choke off debate in return for a promise that the Senate would vote on final passage of marijuana legislation June 7, the same day Ontarians go to the polls.

The bill has been sitting in the Senate awaiting approval since Nov. 28.

Ontario was one province that had actually appeared ready to implement the new legislation by its original target, July 1, a target federal Liberals had been inching away from even before the Senate deal was struck.

The government has already signalled it would need up to three months to get regulations in place to actually open pot outlets, likely pushing implementation past Labour Day.

But the Senate is expected to pass the legislation with amendments, meaning they would have to go back to the Commons, further confusing the time line.

Conservatives were not alone in slowing the bill. Independent senators also raised questions.

It is not a question of recreational marijuana becoming law. For Conservatives, the question is “when.”

The further down the road the Conservatives can push legalized pot, the more they could take advantage of the inevitable problems that will accompany rollout, pushing some of the hiccups into a federal election year when Scheer can highlight problems with the program.

There will be outlets that are not ready. There will be policing concerns. Inevitably, there will be an impaired driving incident involving pot, sparking controversy.

However, the Conservative strategy is not without risks.

They are taking on a popular government policy, a 2015 campaign pledge and one that would likely find favour with the younger voters the party needs.

Their vow to protect our families and children will play to voters who would back them anyway. It would not grow any base.

And using the unelected Senate as the black hat gang to play Reefer Madness and slow legislation passed by elected MPs is also unlikely to be popular.

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But in recent days, in both chambers, Conservatives had no end of concerns over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “rushing” the legislation — announced 28 months ago and introduced into Parliament in April 2017 — into practice.

There were questions over shady cannabis investments in Quebec from offshore tax havens that might have, could have, included Liberal officials.

There were concerns over the legal age, lack of addiction facilities in the North, Indigenous engagement, education surrounding toking and driving, increased consumption, even marijuana as a “gateway” drug.

Government leader Peter Harder had served notice that he would use time allocation to force a vote and get past Conservative obstructionism.

The Conservative leader in the Senate, Larry Smith, indicated he would take his own sweet time because of the intricacy of the legislation.

He had his own laundry list of concerns — health issues, the legal age, impaired driving and people operating heavy machinery after smoking a joint.

Dennis Patterson, a Conservative from Nunavut told constituents in Iqaluit that the Senate was not bound by any timeline, which is technically correct, if not politically risky.

Patterson blamed the government for rolling out a bill while not addressing the lack of an addictions treatment centre in Nunavut.

Tony Dean, the independent senator who sponsored the marijuana bill in the Senate accused Conservatives of taking marching orders from Scheer to delay the bill.

“Mr. Scheer’s senators appear to have snapped to it, and a very serious public health issue is becoming a political football,” Dean wrote in iPolitics.

Harder told his Senate colleagues “any potential delay for the sake of delay would do a disservice to Canadians and to the culture here in this chamber.”

Conservatives countered that political promises were taking precedence over health concerns of youth, likely the first time an opposition had blamed a government for keeping a promise.

Canadians may be ready, but opposition senators have clouded independence with politics, and we’ll just have to wait a bit longer.

Tim Harper writes on national affairs. tjharper77@gmail.com, Twitter: @nutgraf1

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