Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jan 2001
Source: Albuquerque Tribune (NM)
Copyright: 2001 The Albuquerque Tribune
Contact:  P.O. Drawer T, 7777 Jefferson NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109
Website: http://www.abqtrib.com/
Author: Kate Nelson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/johnson.htm for Gov. Gary Johnson items

BEWARE, GARY, YOUR STASH OF GOODWILL MIGHT BE TOAST

Is Governor No Ready To Become Governor You Betcha?

Maybe -- if Gary Johnson truly wants to claim a legislative victory that 
rises to the stature of a legacy.

He won't get it with private-school vouchers; that proposal is shark bait 
as long as Democrats control both chambers of the Legislature. And he'll 
only get a shred of it with tax cuts. Democrats agree the state can afford 
to lighten up on taxpayers, but they disagree with Johnson on whether the 
break should go to lower, middle or upper earners.

Neither one of those is an issue that the Republican naysayer is likely to 
bleed and die for anyway. What Johnson really wants is a victory that draws 
the national spotlight. And his best bet for getting it is by reforming our 
approach to illegal drug use.

 From shadow conventions to Sunday TV talk shows, from nudie magazines to a 
keynote speech at NORML's upcoming national convention, Johnson has become 
a media darling for his drug-legalization stance.

Roundhouse insiders say that's the issue he's staking the session on. But 
as it stands, the odds are stacked against him.

"The likelihood of his drug-reform plan surviving the session intact is not 
high," House Majority Leader Danice Picraux of Albuquerque said.

There are enough reasons for that to fill up a mongo bong. For starters, 
Johnson spent six years antagonizing legislators of both parties with his 
veto-happy, agenda-light governance (including, curiously enough, an 
aversion to any drug-rehabilitation bill that landed on his desk). Then he 
spouted off ill-conceived legalization ideas that galvanized an immediate 
opposition. Candidates in last fall's elections loudly decried what they 
considered the idiocy of ending the drug war. Even the supposedly 
permissive Democratic Party ran campaigns against Republicans it perceived 
as being soft on drugs.

All of which is too bad, now that a task force created by Johnson has 
produced a reasonable set of reforms that don't legalize drugs but do 
inject common sense into how we handle offenders. Some of them admirably 
track the Democrats' desire to focus on rehabilitation rather than 
incarceration. So why the pessimistic prognosis?

Because Johnson's coming a little late to the treatment table, and although 
his intentions are good, his hands are empty.

"The first sentence out of his mouth ought to be, 'I have a plan for 
extensive drug rehabilitation and we are committing this many dollars over 
this amount of time and we're selecting these people to go first,'" Picraux 
said. "Then you'd have a drug rehab program. . . .

"He's been vetoing money for rehab programs and he doesn't have enough 
money now in various health programs. That's a disconnect to say he'd 
really support it."

Even if he did produce rehab details, Picraux said, the plan is a tough sell.

"There's a sense -- and it's strong in northern New Mexico -- that heroin 
and, now, crack cocaine are destroying the fabric of life."

Still, she said, "I'd love to talk to the governor about it."

Sen. Cisco McSorley, an Albuquerque Democrat who served on the task force, 
said he feels good about the plan's chances because the governor has stated 
a willingness to do just that -- talk with legislators for the first time 
in his two-year term. That he also endorsed a task force report underscores 
his newfound political savvy. After all, Johnson once called task forces 
"the black hole" of public policy.

But when it comes time to round up a consensus to clinch the deal, Johnson 
may rue his efforts to aid the re-election defeat of House Speaker Raymond 
Sanchez last year.

"Republicans have cut off the major statesman in New Mexico and 
gubernatorial politics," McSorley said. "Getting anything passed that will 
require huge amounts of compromise and consensus building has been cut off 
at the knees. This is a time when the governor is going to miss Raymond."

Which means, in the end, that Johnson may have won an electoral battle, but 
it could cost him the legacy of his dreams.

Nelson, a member of The Tribune's editorial board, has written about New 
Mexico politics since 1989. Her column runs on Saturdays.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens