Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jun 2003 Source: TomPaine com (US Web) Contact: http://www.tompaine.com/respond2.cfm?articleid=8011 Website: http://www.tompaine.com/ Author: Daniel Forbes Note: Daniel Forbes writes on social policy and has testified before both the U.S. Senate and the House about his work. You can contact him at MAP posted as an exception to MAP's web only source policies. Drug Policy Alliance http://www.drugpolicy.org/ Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org/ National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws http://www.norml.org/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/forbes.htm (Forbes, Daniel) http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) DRUG CZAR STYMIED Although not quite a bloodied-nose defeat for House Republican drug warriors, the Drug Czar reauthorization bill that was voted out of the Committee on Government Reform recently was certainly, as one congressional staffer put it, "a strategic retreat." By denying Republicans bipartisan cover for the Office of National Drug Control Policy's (ONDCP) controversial media campaign, committee Democrats killed several onerous provisions of the pending bill. Originally, H.R. 2086 had covertly extended ONDCP's authority to use up to $1.02 billion in anti-drug advertising to counter state ballot initiatives -- or even candidates -- the White House opposed. ONDCP would not have been required to identify itself as the sponsor of the ads. Plus the federal government could have withdrawn some funding from police departments in states that permit the use of medical marijuana, using the money to prosecute patients and those who supply them instead. It was a classic lunge for power grounded in deliberately obscure language. Once these provisions surfaced, drug reformers and voters cranked up the pressure, and prominent editorial pages ridiculed such taxpayer-funded overt electioneering. Ironically, the overreach actually paved the way for some bona fide reform. Though its fate in the full House and Senate awaits, the language that emerged prohibits using the ads "for partisan political purposes, or [to] express advocacy in support of or to defeat any clearly identified candidate, clearly identified ballot initiative, or clearly identified legislative or regulatory proposal." That's a direct reversal of the Republicans' intent. Additionally, ONDCP is required, according to an analysis by the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), to "decertify the federal budget if the Department of Education blocks school loans and grants to former drug offenders." Some 100,000 students have lost federal loans and scholarships since 1999 due to drug convictions. An amendment to allow Congress 30 days to preview any new ad was defeated, though, and Drug Czar John Walters retains sole approval over the media campaign. "The Drug Czar can still say medical marijuana is bad -- there's still wiggle room," says Steve Fox of the Marijuana Policy Project. "But it is a strong victory for us." Opposition arose across the political spectrum, with eight disparate groups generating an open letter to committee chair Tom Davis (R-Va.) and ranking member Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), condemning use of the ads "to pressure policy-makers or interfere with local and state elections." At stake, the signers felt, was nothing more than "the safety of... our democracy." Two ballot initiative groups, as well as Common Cause, DPA and MPP, the National Black Police Association signed, as did those strange bedfellows, the conservative National Taxpayers Union and liberal Taxpayers for Common Sense. As the NTU stated, letting the drug czar loose in this fashion "would inevitably lead to campaigning by IRS officials, EPA officials" and other agencies. NTU's Paul J. Gessing noted, "That partisan use is pretty ridiculous. It might have slipped in had no one been looking. But left, right, center -- there was an outcry." Given the protest, Republicans didn't want to defend partisan social engineering without some Democratic cover. According to one Hill staffer, any real discussion might have devolved into a debate on the merits of medical marijuana itself -- not a happy prospect for a GOP aiming for the reauthorization bill's smooth passage through the House. "If committee Democrats had opposed it, that would have raised a lot of eyebrows in the full House," said Bill Piper of Drug Policy Alliance. Of course, the snowball-in-hell legislative victory is tempered by the realization that the ad campaign -- which was engendered by the passage of two medical marijuana ballot initiatives in 1996 -- is still authorized for the next five years, with a $90-million funding boost over the initial five-year appropriation. This despite the Office of Management and Budget recommendation that the so-far ineffective effort be reauthorized for a single year pending further evaluation. Keith Stroup, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said, "Though Rep. Waxman deserves real credit for leading the charge to fix some of these provisions -- and the Republicans got a lot more heat than expected -- it's hard to get terribly excited about a new, $1-billion, five-year ad campaign." While pot-use-equals-terrorism ads blanketed the nation's airwaves prior to last year's vote on several state drug-reform initiatives, government studies offer no evidence they do a lick to keep kids from drugs. They may even encourage girls and younger kids, i.e, the more susceptible, to pick up that first joint. Despite growing methamphetamine use, the ads will continue their focus on marijuana, according to the statute. In fact, should it pass, Congress will enshrine in federal law the following "findings": that 60 percent of adolescent drug treatment admissions come from marijuana; that THC levels (a measure of pot's strength) are now "as high as 30 percent today"; that "early in life" pot smokers "may be up to five times more likely to use hard drugs." Never mind that more than half of those adolescents are forced into treatment, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. Never mind that the THC claims are bogus. As to the last, the so-called "gateway theory," never mind it's been dead as a doornail for years. Congress also "finds" that the government has "identified clear links suggesting that trade in hydroponic marijuana facilitates trade by criminal organization in hard drugs, including heroin." And, the feds "have identified possible links between trade in marijuana and financing for terrorist organizations." On the one hand, there's clear links that suggest something, and on the other hand, possible links between something. Parsing it all yields the sort of fudging that any reasonably clear-eyed editor would red-pencil into oblivion. Still, ONDCP is directed to focus on the most used and, many maintain, most benign illegal drug, a proven medicine whose rapidly spreading medical use is the weak link in current federal policy. Maryland Gov. Robert Erhlich just became the first Republican governor to sign legislation allowing a medical-use defense against state pot charges. That there needs to be a media campaign to shore up this crumbling edifice was also underscored by the one-day sentence -- rather than some daunting portion of the possible 60 years -- a federal judge issued to high-profile medical marijuana grower Ed Rosenthal, who had been sanctioned by the City of Oakland to supply its patients. This sort of actual news will be countered (since the ads are purchased at 50-cents-on-the-dollar) by some $2 billion worth of claptrap such as a kid smoking a joint and shooting his friend, or a young teen somehow getting pregnant via the demon weed and, her only option, having the baby. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake