Pubdate: Sun, 26 Jan 2014 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2014 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Nathan Jones Note: Jones is the Alfred C. Glassell Postdoctoral Fellow in Drug Policy at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy. POLITICS SLOWS BID TO CHANGE LAW Washington's and Colorado's legalization of recreational marijuana and President Barack Obama's recent comments in The New Yorker have reignited a marijuana legalization debate in Texas. The president's words were perfectly banal to anyone who has studied drug policy - "I don't think marijuana is more dangerous than alcohol;" I don't think it's a "good idea;" minorities are disproportionately punished; it's "a vice," etc. In fact, academic research consistently finds that the health consequences of problem marijuana use are far lower than problem alcohol use. The president was actually understating the case. Perhaps responding to Obama's comments, Gov. Rick Perry, speaking Thursday at a forum in Davos, Switzerland, touted a policy of diverting nonviolent drug offenders into drug courts instead of incarceration. While this is a step in the right direction, it still saddles offenders with arrest records, does nothing for those with legitimate medical needs and does not address the supply issue, meaning organized crime still profits. Something else strange is happening in Texas on marijuana policy. With the exception of speaking against Obama's marijuana comments - which has more to do with being anti-Obama than any principled stand - few will speak publicly against marijuana legalization. I know this because in the last month, two radio producers have contacted me in their search for guests who can speak intelligently against marijuana legalization in the state of Texas. They had come up empty-handed despite their best efforts. I gave them the name of Kevin Sabet, a former senior adviser in the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy who is now based in Florida. They replied they already know about him and needed someone from Texas. In one instance, they asked me to present the "con" argument as a devil's advocate on behalf of the silent minority. Support for marijuana legalization is polling at 58 percent nationally and in Texas. The state also is going through a massive demographic shift that includes large increases in the Latino population. According to recent studies by the American Civil Liberties Union, Latinos and blacks are disproportionately arrested and prosecuted for marijuana offenses despite using at roughly the same rates as whites. Nationally, the opinion on marijuana is shifting rapidly. Colorado has legalized and regulated recreational marijuana use and sales, and Washington will initiate its system this year. Twenty states and the District of Columbia have medical marijuana systems, with more likely to come this year. Even the long-recalcitrant state of New York is now - - through Gov. Andrew Cuomo's executive order - establishing a medical marijuana system. California and Oregon appear poised to legalize recreational marijuana in the near future. The federal government is allowing these legalization efforts to play out largely unimpeded. Internationally, Uruguay is establishing a framework for legal marijuana, in contravention of the international treaties that maintain the international prohibition regime. Jamaica is debating decriminalization of small quantities of marijuana, joining others such as Portugal and the Netherlands that have done so. A change in global marijuana policy seems inevitable. How do we explain the lack of movement on marijuana policy in Texas despite broad-based societal support for it? The short answer is: politics. Lacking an initiative system that would allow voters to place bills on the ballot, legalization in Texas must go through the Legislature. Gerrymandered districts keep the majority that supports legalization fragmented. Politicians have to appeal to their bases in primary elections, forcing them to move to extremes, who, at least in Texas, tend not to favor legalization of marijuana. Beyond that, even if legislators author bills favoring legalization, their opponents can kill those bills before they leave committee or see that they never get on the calendar for open debate and a vote of the entire chamber. But over the long term, all of these legal mechanisms will be futile in the face of overwhelming and increasing support. Finally and most telling, public officials are afraid of being labeled soft on crime, but they also know that the writing about marijuana legalization is already on the wall. If they talk too forcefully against marijuana legalization and the politics of the state shift, they will be politically dead, but if they speak in favor of legalization too early they can die a short-term political death. So, we have silence from our leaders. How long will Texas marijuana legalization take? I predict legislative pushes by groups supporting marijuana decriminalization, medicalization and legalization over the next few sessions. They will lose the first round but establish public awareness that will pave the way for passage in subsequent attempts. Many say Texas will be the last place to legalize. I say that distinction will go to the even more conservative Mississippi. Get ready for a sea change over the next decade. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D