Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Alan Travis, The Guardian Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) A BLOW FOR HISTORY The headline in yesterday's London Evening Standard "The Cabinet is going to Pot!" had a strong whiff of the 1970s. Now we have a home secretary, Jacqui Smith, who admits that she smoked cannabis at university. Then we had a home secretary, James Callaghan, who, in drawing up the drugs laws that are still in force today, believed that cannabis was as bad as heroin and should be listed as a class A drug with heavy prison sentences for possession and dealing. His views stirred a sharp debate inside the 1970 Labour government, with the cabinet dividing, according to Richard Crossman's diaries, strictly according to who had been to university and who had not. A revolt by the cabinet's "student faction," as it was dubbed, actually came close to fixing the maximum penalty at a UKP200 fine - not far from the present class C classification. The prime minister, Harold Wilson, and Mr Callaghan compromised and created a special intermediate class B for cannabis, halfway between "hard" and "soft" drugs with a maximum penalty of five years in prison and an unlimited fine for possession. The cabinet minutes recall that most ministers felt "that a sharp distinction between the penalties for the possession of cannabis and heroin would discourage users of cannabis from experimenting with the more dangerous drug." The terms of the debate and the law have hardly changed in the last 35 years. If anything, the political potency went out of the issue the moment in 2000 when Ann Widdecombe proposed to the Tory party conference that a zero tolerance policy towards cannabis should be adopted and half the shadow cabinet promptly admitted they had been student smokers. By the time Ms Smith got to Oxford in the early 1980s, the authorities were far more worried about the link between heroin injecting and HIV/Aids than the widespread teenage experimentation with cannabis. By the time she had become a teacher, surveys were showing that as many as one in three teenagers had tried smoking dope. All but a very small proportion - as testified by the seven ministers yesterday - soon gave it up. But Ms Smith now faces the difficult question of whether to tighten the drug laws. The most recent evidence shows that cannabis use is falling, down from 28% of teenagers who had smoked it in the last year six years ago to 21% now. Yesterday turned out to be the day when it was finally safe for cabinet ministers to admit their past indiscretions, but nobody knows how long the amnesty will last. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake