Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jan 2002
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2002 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact:  http://www.starbulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/196
Author: Rod Thompson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

GREEN PARTY PONDERS LETTING POT ADVOCATE BE THEIR CANDIDATE

HILO -- The state Green Party will tell Big Island marijuana advocate 
Jonathan Adler before the end of the month whether he can run for governor 
as a Green, said party Co-chairman Ira Rohter.

Adler, 49, ran unsuccessfully for Big Island offices three times as a 
nonpartisan and announced last summer he would run again as a nonpartisan, 
this time for governor.

He switched to the Green Party, and on Dec. 24 he received confirmation 
that the Greens had received his application for membership and his request 
to be nominated for governor.

Rohter said the party has 30 days to give Adler an answer, until about Jan. 24.

Adler is usually identified with his marijuana advocacy.

"It usually comes back like a spider web," Rohter said. "All roads lead to 
the one issue."

But in answering a Green questionnaire, Adler said his three main issues 
are taxation -- he wants higher taxes on "those who benefit the most" in 
society; education -- he would lower building costs by using pre-engineered 
steel buildings, which he sells; and the environment -- he would reduce 
pollution by burning waste.

In August, Adler was tried for possessing 89 marijuana plants in 1998, but 
a mistrial was declared when the jury deadlocked.

A retrial will begin Jan. 22 without a jury, with Judge Greg Nakamura 
considering the legal issue of whether the state has a "compelling 
interest" to limit Adler's religious use of marijuana.

If Adler wins that case, a second case set for trial Feb. 19, involving 55 
plants in 1999, could be moot.

Rohter said the Green Party has no official position on marijuana 
legalization, but some members might object to Adler's marijuana advocacy.

"Some people would say it's the kiss of death," he said.

The party has the right not to accept Adler as a candidate, even though no 
other Green may be running for governor, he said.

In 2000 a Big Island judge ruled in favor of the Green Party and 
disqualified Darryl "Buck" Wheat from running for mayor as a Green because 
he had not joined the party in time to qualify as a candidate and because 
he had not undergone party review.

Three other candidates were also rejected by the Green Party, Rohter said: 
Gregory Goodwin on Kauai and Edwina Wong on Oahu, who both wanted to run 
for governor in 1994, and comedian Kaui Hill, known as Bu Laia, on Oahu, 
who wanted to run as governor in 1998.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jackl