Pubdate: Fri, 16 May 2003 Source: West Australian (Australia) Copyright: 2003 West Australian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.thewest.com.au Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/495 Author: Steve Pennells LIBERAL DOPE PROTEST RUNS OUT OF PUFF MAYBE it was the rain. Let's hope it was the rain - at least for Colin Barnett's sake. If not, yesterday's turnout on the steps of Parliament House means the Opposition Leader has seriously misjudged the community's care factor over Labor's cannabis reforms. Take away the journalists, Liberal MPs, police and Parliament House staff, and the State Opposition would have been lucky to have mustered 50 people. Based on that dismal turnout, Monday night's Liberal-arranged public meeting on cannabis reform was positively teeming. About 75 people turned up at the North City Christian Centre in Padbury for that gig. It was heartbreaking yesterday to watch Mr Barnett talk up the numbers at the Parliament steps as an outpouring of community anger. But to be fair, this apparent apathy is not restricted to the anti-cannabis brigade. A pro-marijuana law reform rally attracted only 15 people to the steps of Parliament House last August. Each side of the argument seems to have its passionate advocates, but neither can muster up similar passions in the broader community. What the Opposition needs is not a ragtag gathering of mostly religious interests waving duplicates of the same photocopied placards. It needs a balltearer of a protest - something along the lines of the 1991 Rally for Justice, where 30,000 people, most of whom were not victims of crime themselves, turned up to make a point. Shock jock Howard Sattler was a big force behind that show of public anger. He was also spruiking yesterday's rally but was unable to convince listeners to take to the streets this time around. The State Opposition is nevertheless trumpeting Labor's cannabis law reforms as the issue that could topple the Government and is boosted by the sentiments of talkback radio audiences. "This is the defining issue between me and Geoff Gallop," Mr Barnett said to the anti-reform gathering yesterday and repated in the corridors of Parliament House later in the afternoon. For much of this week he has shared his audience with British drug counsellor Julie Fawcett, who was flown in to Perth courtesy of WA Liberal MPs. Mr Barnett forked out for her airfare, Opposition drug abuse spokesman Simon O'Brien paid for accomodation and other Liberal MPs picked up the rest. They say it shows that they believe enough in the issue to put their hands in their pockets and their trust in a stranger. They stress she is not simply singing their song because of the free trip. Ms Fawcett is a passionate speaker. She has done the media rounds, spoken at the meetings and condemned the Government's cannabis plans. There is no reason to doubt her experience or her predictions of what will happen. But even this guest of WA Liberal gratitude is not having the impact the Liberals hoped. Their campaign against the Government has been running for months but has had little effect. If Westpolls are any guide, it has been quite the reverse. In a poll earlier this year, 46 per cent of people interviewed opposed the State Government's plans, down from 56 per cent and 53 per cent in Westpolls held in March last year and December 2001. Mr Barnett is undeterred. He believes he is on a winner and will carry his cannabis fight to the next election, along with campaigning on Labor's tax increases and the pet political topics of health and law and order. He needs a couple of killer issues if he wants to knock the Government off its perch and Labor's own advice is they will be struggling at the next election. Labor's inability to boost its popularity in the polls is causing considerable angst within the party, compounded by the recent electoral redistribution which is expected to cost it at least two seats. State secretary Bill Johnston reported to caucus last week that the redistribution would hurt Labor. Mr Barnett is banking on cannabis to create a "Labor is soft on drugs" theme for the next election. Based on yesterday's turnout, there are about 50 votes in it so far. Maybe when the rain clears ... - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens