Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 2004 Source: Anchorage Press (AK) Copyright: 2004 Anchorage Publishing, Inc. Contact: http://www.anchoragepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3078 Author: Amanda Coyne Cited: Proposition 2 http://www.yeson2alaska.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/marijuana+initiative Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) ONE WORD OVER THE LINE There's certainly no love lost between Anchorage Democratic Representative Eric Croft and Republican Lieutenant Governor Loren Leman, who oversees the Alaska Division of Elections. The tussle between the two has been going on for a while, but just recently made it into the news when Superior Court Judge Morgan Christen sided with Croft over the language in the "Trust the People" initiative he sponsored. Judge Christen ruled the ballot language worded by the Leman's office was biased and factually inaccurate. That proposition proposes to remove the governor's authority to appoint a Senate replacement if a seat becomes vacant. Prior to that court battle, Leman wrote a letter to Croft about the initiative. In that letter, he said, "You suggest that 'political pressures' have caused me to act or not act in a way other than what you would want. This is absurd. You may think if you repeat these falsehoods enough times, the media and others will believe them. Judge Christen, apparently, is one of those "others." But there are plenty of other "others," too. "Croft & Company," as Leman calls the folks behind the Trust the People initiative, are not the only people who believe that the lieutenant governor had a heavy hand in the wording of their ballot initiative. The Proposition 2 people - the pot people - say they were steam-rolled, too. This is how these things usually work. The sponsors of the initiative write the language they want to appear on the ballot. The lieutenant governor's office and the attorney general's office have the option of rewriting it. When and if they do, it is normally sent back to the sponsors for their approval. This process was already completed with the pot initiative language in 2001. The pot people had no reason not to believe that the language that was already approved wouldn't appear on the ballot. But Ken Jacobus, the lawyer for the pot initiative, was surprised when he saw a new version on the Internet. The whole thing was changed. But it was one little word that he most objected too, one little hot-button word that might make all the difference in the world: "children." Prior to Leman's rewording, the initiative read: "State law could not stop doctors from prescribing marijuana." Now the November 2 ballot initiative reads: "It removes all existing state restrictions on prescription of all marijuana patients, including children." Jacobus had already been in touch with Leman, requesting that he change the language. Jacobus didn't officially challenge it because, he says, there wasn't enough time. Also, he didn't think he had the best case. The initiative itself does say that there should be no age-restrictions for prescribing medicinal marijuana. But Proposition 2 backers insist that the initiative's authors didn't intend for doctors to prescribe pot to four-year-olds. But they wouldn't want a sweeping law to restrict marijuana prescriptions for, say, an 18-year-old suffering from leukemia. After Judge Christen ordered the reprinting of the ballots to change the wording for the Trust the People initiative (at a cost of nearly $300,000), Jacobus wrote a letter to Leman requesting that his office should change the pot language, too. "While technically true," Jacobus wrote Leman, "it is unnecessarily editorializing against the initiative. As a practical matter, children are not prescribed medical marijuana, and the specter that they would be should not be in the ballot language." Leman said he's sticking with wording he and his staff came up with for Proposition 2. He also denies any bias. He said that Proposition 2's authors left him no choice. "My job is to be as fair and impartial as possible," Leman said. "They may say it's farfetched (that a doctor would prescribe pot to a child), but I have to walk a very fine line." When asked if there might be a better way to go about addressing such concerns - such as by having a non-partisan body oversee the Division of Elections - Leman said, "Now you're implying that I can't be impartial." Leman has admitted being against the pot initiative. He also has some "strong feelings" about "Croft & Company." But, he said, "it would be inappropriate of me to tell you what they are." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake