By McClatchy News

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., no longer opposes the legal use of marijuana, she told McClatchy in an interview on Tuesday.

“Federal law enforcement agents should not arrest Californians who are adhering to California law,” said Feinstein, who is facing a challenge in the Democratic primary from state Sen. Kevin de León.

The senator, a longtime opponent of legalization who has been called “California’s last prohibitionist” by Leafly, a pro-cannabis website, changed her views after meetings with constituents, her office said.

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California, which is one of nine states that allow recreational marijuana use, along with the District of Columbia, voted to legalize in 2016, via Proposition 64. Feinstein was strongly opposed at the time, although she supported medical marijuana use. Citing her time on the California parole board in the 1960s, Feinstein told an Associated Press reporter that marijuana is a gateway drug. She said Prop 64 did not do enough to protect young people and motorists.

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