Polish party leader threatens to light up joint in Parliament, wants soft drugs decriminalized - The Washington Post
Polish MP 'lights up' for legal marijuana (AFP) / 1,20,2012 WARSAW - Janusz Palikot, the leader of a new party which brought in Poland's first trans-gender and openly gay MPs, launched a drive Friday to legalise marijuana by smoking pot in parliament. "This is the weed," he told reporters in his office in the lower house of parliament, lighting up a large incense joint containing what he said was a legal quantity of marijuana. Palikot said his party had submitted a bill to legalise marijuana. Earlier on Friday, the philosophy graduate known for his flamboyant political stunts, caused a stir when he announced he would "light up" in parliament. "I want to condemn the hypocrisy concerning marijuana consumption," Palikot told reporters. "Someone said they would smoke a joint in parliament and the reaction was tantamount to someone announcing a coup d'etat." In April, Polish lawmakers voted to soften their country's strict anti-drug laws by giving prosecutors the option not to charge people detained with small quantities of illegal narcotics. But complaining the measures give prosecutors too much discretion, Palikot is seeking the full legalisation of marijuana. ________
Polish pol threatens to smoke pot in Parliament AP / 1,20,2012 WARSAW, Poland-The leader of a new left-wing party in Poland threatened to light up a joint in Parliament on Friday -- but just burned incense instead. Janusz Palikot is campaigning to get soft drugs legalized and to otherwise liberalize the conservative country. "We're trying to get into room 143 to burn some grass, in accordance with our announcement," Palikot told reporters in a news conference held in his Parliament office. Palikot's plan, however, put him on a collision course with the speaker, Ewa Kopacz, who vowed not to let him break the law in Parliament. She reported him to prosecutors, and in the end, Palikot simply lit incense sticks containing a tiny amount of cannabis. They emitted a scent of burning marijuana, but Palikot said they were purchased legally in a shop. Palikot is introducing a draft law that would decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana. His proposal has little chance of passing, however. His party, Palikot's Movement, won 10 percent of votes in October elections, becoming the third largest party in the lower house of the parliament, the Sejm, but still lacking the votes needed to change laws. The largest party, the center-right Civic Platform of Prime Minister Donald Tusk, opposes the legalization of any drugs. The party has also vowed to support gay rights and to fight to liberalize the country's restrictive abortion laws. It opposes the strong influence of the Catholic church in politics and society, and has called for the removal of a Christian cross hanging in the Sejm. The country's first ever openly gay and transsexual lawmakers entered Parliament this fall on Palikot's party ticket. Prosecutors have opened an investigation into whether Palikot broke a law against "promoting or advertising" drugs with his threat to smoke pot in Parliament, the news agency PAP reported. That is a crime that could carry a prison sentence of up to a year.