Pubdate: Mon, 18 Oct 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Jose Mercury News Contact: (408) 271-3792 Mail: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Patrick May, Mercury News Staff Writer Cited: Drug Policy Foundation http://www.dpf.org/ N.M. GOVERNOR'S AIM: DEBATE ON DRUG WAR SANTA FE, N.M. -- Here's how Gov. Gary Johnson plans to relax next weekend: Fly to Hawaii. Swim for 2.4 miles off the Kona coast. Bike 112 miles over lava fields. Then wrap up the rest of the Ironman Triathlon with a 26.2-mile marathon by nightfall. For Johnson, baby-faced self-made millionaire, health nut and first governor in state history to serve back-to-back terms, the Ironman will seem like a luau after what he has been through this month. When Johnson recently became the highest-ranking elected official to call for legalization of marijuana, cocaine, heroin and other drugs, he set a fire under what basically has been a dormant debate about legalizing drugs as a way to wrestle the problem to the ground. The fact that he's a Republican gave him a big box of matches to play with. The back draft has been a scorcher. America's drug czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, flew to Albuquerque in a tizzy, referring to the governor as "goofy" and "Puff Daddy Johnson," a reference to the popular rap artist. Advocates pulled out the champagne, saying a national discourse on legalization was finally at hand. TV and radio reporters have been salivating, reducing much of Johnson's proposals to sensational sound bites. And the governor's staff, long accustomed to his speak-from-the-hip style, can't shut their boss up. "I just wanted to get a discussion going on the biggest head-in-the-sand issue in this country today," the governor said Friday in an interview with the Mercury News. "It's like a stick of butter, and we've moved it from the freezer to the fridge." Then there are the Republicans of New Mexico, hardly happy to see one of their own publicly trash the party's anti-legalization stand. "Politics are like nature," said state Sen. Billy McKibben. "Every once in a while, nature will throw out a freak, like a calf with two heads. As far as New Mexico politics are concerned, Gov. Johnson is our two-headed calf." Johnson, 46 and a married father of two, has taken to calling himself "Don Quixote" and admits his proposal has people wondering what he's been smoking. "Politically," he says, "this baby is zippo. No one anywhere wants to take up this banner." But that hasn't slowed him down. Every chance he gets, from the nightly news to a speech Friday before mortgage bankers in an Albuquerque hotel ballroom, Johnson is slinging his pitch. Drug Policy Proposal One, the drug war is a waste of money, as America throws billions of dollars at a problem that refuses to go away. Two, drug use would actually go down if America followed Johnson's mantra: "Control, regulate, tax, educate and prevent." And, three, in a piece of his proposal sure to shock many Americans who may be inclined to decriminalize pot, Johnson maintains that if legalization works for marijuana, it should also work for heroin. Some, of course, think the governor is off his rocker. "There's always going to be a black market for drugs, whether they're legal or not," said Bob Weiner, an aide to McCaffrey. "Drug use under Johnson's plan would go up. Kids who don't use drugs now because they don't want to end up with it on their records would start using them. You'd quintuple the car crashes, the deaths, the problems in the workplace. Johnson's ideas make for great cocktail-party talk but very poor policy." That view, of course, is debatable. And a debate is precisely what Johnson hopes will come out of his recent high-pitched and almost whiny gospel message. "Legalize heroin?" he said Friday on a call-in radio talk show, where supporters outnumbered critics 3 to 1. "I'm not talking about Snicker bars, heroin and Payday lined up in the 7-Eleven. I'm talking about a whole new set of laws to regulate its sale, maybe giving it by prescription at a clinic, maybe making the user take it right there on the spot." Astute Johnson watchers shouldn't have been too surprised when the notoriously outspoken governor spoke out. Johnson had acknowledged during his first gubernatorial campaign in 1994 that he used marijuana and cocaine while at the University of New Mexico. However, he said he stopped using drugs after college and quit drinking alcohol 12 years ago. Today he prides himself on being the most physically fit governor in the nation, running 10 miles a day at the crack of dawn, entering triathlons and climbing mountains. And he says that legal or not, drugs are bad and people should refrain from using them. Scaling Mount Everest, which Johnson plans to do when he retires from public office in 2002, may seem a cinch compared with getting a real debate over drugs going at a national level, the arena in which Johnson feels the discourse belongs. Lack Of Debate There may be plenty of room for debate between the extremes, effectively marked off last week by the Johnson-McCaffrey cat fight on the nation's airwaves, but not a lot of people, especially elected officeholders, care to stray into the battle. "There really isn't any debate in this country," said Peter Reuter, a University of Maryland economist who has written extensively on drug markets and the legalization issue. "There's a large in-the-closet sentiment for legalization, but that doesn't make a debate. It's really just fringe elements talking about it now." Johnson's call for a re-examination of the drug war got lost in the fireworks over Albuquerque this month, said Attorney General Darren White, a friend of Johnson's, a member of his Cabinet and the highest-ranking law enforcement officer in New Mexico. White said that while he's "vehemently opposed" to legalization, "I support the governor's call for a national discourse. But the issue's been clouded because his message is being played out in eight-second sound bites." As Drug Policy Foundation analyst Rob Stewart observed, "The drug issue in America is so charged that real debate just gets locked up by the opposing rhetoric. But perhaps with Johnson being perceived by some as so far out, this'll open up a middle ground for others to start talking about drugs reasonably." In the meantime, the stats fly back and forth. Johnson said more damage than good is done by locking up 700,000 people on marijuana-related crimes, which he said the nation did in 1997. McCaffrey fired back with fresh reports from the front lines, pointing out that drug use in the United States actually has dropped 50 percent since 1979. To which the self-described "reality-driven" bottom-line Republican replies: "So if we've reduced use by 50 percent, shouldn't we be spending 50 percent less on the war?" Former San Jose Police Chief Joseph McNamara, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, agreed. "This drug war is stupid. We probably ruined a lot of lives with those arrests, and very few of those people who smoke marijuana commit other crimes." Support For Legalization Some polls have shown that close to 40 percent of Americans would favor legalizing marijuana. And in several Western states, including California, voters recently have come out in favor of distributing marijuana for medical reasons. But pushing to legitimize heroin and cocaine probably strikes most Americans as somewhere between irresponsible and completely nuts. And Johnson knows it. "Realistically speaking, if you can start with (legalizing) marijuana, I would suggest that's huge," he said. "And realistically speaking, that may be 15 years off. But it would be better to have it 15 years off than 80 years off. And talking about it now, in my opinion, is going to get that closer." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake