Warren rolled out a plan Sunday for a “just and equitable cannabis industry,” aimed at not only legalizing recreational marijuana but also putting regulations in place so that tax revenue from subsequent cannabis sales benefits communities of color unfairly targeted by old marijuana laws.

“Legalizing marijuana gives us an opportunity to repair some of the damage caused by our current criminal justice system, to invest in the communities that have suffered the most harm, and to ensure that everyone can participate in the growing cannabis industry,” Warren stated in the plan. “We have an opportunity now to get this right, and I’ll fight to make that happen.”

Like most of her Democratic opponents, Warren supported Sen. Cory Booker’s (D-N.J.) Marijuana Justice Act, which would legalize marijuana federally and erase past convictions for pot use or possession.

However, her campaign said in a statement, those two measures “won’t fully end the War on Drugs or address its painful legacy.”

“Legalizing marijuana is about more than just allowing recreational use, or the potential medicinal benefit, or the money that can be made from this new market,” Warren wrote. “It’s about undoing a century of racist policy that disproportionately targeted Black and Latino communities. It’s about rebuilding the communities that have suffered the most harm. And it’s about ensuring that everyone has access to the opportunities that the new cannabis market provides.”

Under her plan, Warren vowed to use presidential executive authority if Congress refused to take action to legalize marijuana. She also said she would advocate for immigrants with nonviolent drug offenses — such as marijuana possession — to be protected from deportation and still be eligible for a pathway to citizenship.

Drawing from several of her other plans, Warren said she would fight to make sure communities of color were included in a burgeoning cannabis industry by strengthening collective bargaining laws, ensuring entrepreneurs of color have equal access to the banking system and establishing a fund to support women- and minority-owned cannabis businesses.

“Some research has shown that today, less than a fifth of the people involved at an ownership or stake-holder level in the cannabis industry are people of color, while black people made up less than 5 percent,” Warren wrote. “We cannot allow affluent and predominantly white hedge-funders and capital investors to hoard the profits from the same behavior that led to the incarceration of generations of Black and Latino youth.”

Two-thirds of Americans now support legalizing marijuana, according to recent data from the Pew Research Center. Of the candidates who remain in the Democratic primary, only Biden and Bloomberg do not support legalizing recreational marijuana. Biden prefers to leave legalization up to the states, but he argues for decriminalizing the drug, meaning users could not be arrested for possessing it.