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Old 08-08-2003, 03:14 PM
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Presidential Candidates' Stance on MJ

* Presidential Candidates Voice Opinions On The Medical Use Of Marijuana

__________________________________________________ ____________________
Presidential Candidates Voice Opinions On The Medical Use Of Marijuana
"It's promising to see many of the candidates distinguishing themselves
from the Bush administration by taking positions in support of the medical
use of marijuana," NORML Executive Director Says
Washington, DC: Among the nine announced Democratic candidates for
President, more than half have expressed various degrees of support for
the medical use of marijuana. Their positions stand in sharp contrast to
that of the Bush administration, which has overseen approximately 40 raids
of state-authorized medicinal marijuana patients and providers, and is
appealing a unanimous Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision upholding
the rights of physicians to discuss marijuana therapy with their patients.
"It's promising to see many of the Presidential candidates
distinguishing themselves from the Bush administration by taking positions
in support of the medical use of marijuana - a position shared by 80
percent of the American public," NORML Executive Director Keith Stroup
said. "We can only hope that they will back-up their rhetoric with real
political action to protect patients from arrest."
Of the candidates, Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich has been the most
outspoken in support of the legalization of medical marijuana.
Kucinich told the San Francisco Chronicle in May that pot should be
available "to any patient who needs it to alleviate pain and suffering,"
and promised, if elected, to "sign an executive order [to] permit its
use." Most recently, Kucinich lobbied on the House floor in favor of an
amendment to bar the Justice Department from using federal funds to
prosecute state-authorized medical marijuana patients. "States deserve to
have the right to make their own decisions regarding the use of medical
marijuana," he said. "The federal government should use its power to help
terminally ill citizens, not arrest them."
Kucinich's new found support for medical marijuana is a dramatic shift
in the Congressman's position. In 1988, Kucinich voted in favor of a
House resolution defining marijuana as "a dangerous and addictive drug
[that] should not be legalized for medicinal use." Kucinich is currently
a co-sponsor of a pair of federal bills seeking to liberalize federal law
regarding the use of medical marijuana by qualified patients.
Candidate John Kerry (D-Mass) has also expressed support for medical
marijuana law reform, stating at a New Hampshire town meeting in July that
he is "in favor" of its use under a doctor's supervision. Kerry also told
California NORML coordinator Dale Gieringer at a recent San Francisco
fundraiser that he would establish an interagency commission to revise the
federal government's ban on medical marijuana. This week Kerry repeated
that he remains "open to the question of medical marijuana," but tempered
his support by adding that he would like to review studies comparing
marijuana to other medications before deciding whether to back its
legalization.
Senator Joe Lieberman (D-CT) has been less forthright in his position,
though in July he told a representative from New Hampshire's Granite
Staters for Medical Marijuana that he would "probably" sign legislation as
President allowing seriously ill patients to use the drug medicinally. In
addition, Lieberman now claims that he is "sympathetic" to the issue,
despite having co-sponsored in 1998 a Senate resolution opposing any use
of marijuana as a medicine.
Similarly, Rep. Dick Gephardt (D-MO) also appears to have shifted his
position since 1998, when he backed a House resolution opposing medical
pot. In July, Gephardt told Granite Staters' patient representative Linda
Macia that he supported state laws legalizing the use of marijuana under a
doctor's supervision, and that he would sign federal legislation allowing
pot's use under limited circumstances. Unlike Kucinich however, Kerry,
Gephardt and Lieberman have yet to endorse Congressional legislation
amending the federal government's ban on medical marijuana.
Among the remaining candidates, both former Vermont governor Howard
Dean and US Sen. John Edwards (D-NC) have said publicly that they oppose
arresting and jailing patients for using medicinal marijuana, but neither
one has endorsed the drug's legalization.
Speaking on CNN earlier this week, Dean said that he didn't think the
Feds should "throw [patients] in jail in California" for using marijuana,
but added that he opposed legalizing pot through the state initiative
process. "I think that marijuana should be treated like every other drug
... and there shouldn't be a special process which is based on politics to
legalize it," he told a caller on Larry King Live. While Governor, Dean
actively opposed a proposed state law to remove criminal penalties on the
possession and use of marijuana for medical purposes.
Speaking at a New Hampshire town hall meeting in July, Edwards said
that he would appoint a "non-partisan commission" to study marijuana's
therapeutic value, but stopped short of endorsing the drug's use. Edwards
also criticized the Bush administration's decision to target and prosecute
state-authorized medical marijuana patients, but offered little in the way
of alternatives, noting, "The government has a responsibility to enforce
the law."
Lastly, Senator Bob Graham (D-FL) has said that he opposes the use of
medical marijuana, but pledged that as President he would "defer to the
states" on the issue. Candidates C. Mosely Braun and Al Sharpton have yet
to make any public statements regarding the subject.
For more information, please contact either Keith Stroup or Paul
Armentano at (202) 483-5500. To download and send NORML's marijuana
policy questionnaire to the 2004 Presidential candidates, please visit:
http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=5643
__________________
What's in the darkness must be revealed to light. We're not here to judge good from bad, but to do the things that are right.

Bob Marley
 
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