Anti-Pot Prejudice vs. Federalism
Growing Republican support for letting states go their own way on medical marijuana
Last week, by a vote of 219 to 189, the House of Representatives approved an amendment aimed at stopping federal interference with state laws that "authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana." If it is included in the appropriations bill passed by the Senate and signed by the president, the amendment would prohibit the Justice Department, which includes the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), from spending taxpayers' money on dispensary raids or other attempts to stop medical use of marijuana in the 22 states that allow it.
Similar measures have failed in the House six times since 2003. This year the amendment attracted record support from Republicans, 49 of whom voted yes, compared to 28 last time around. "This measure passed because it received more support from Republicans than ever before," says Dan Riffle of the Marijuana Policy Project. "It is refreshing to see conservatives in Congress sticking to their conservative principles when it comes to marijuana policy. Republicans increasingly recognize that marijuana prohibition is a failed Big Government program that infringes on states' rights."
Yet Republicans still overwhelmingly opposed the amendment, by a ratio of more than 3 to 1, while Democrats overwhelmingly supported it, by a ratio of 10 to 1. Given the GOP's frequent lip service to federalism, the party's lack of enthusiasm for letting states set their own policies in this area requires some explanation. So does the need for this amendment under a Democratic administration that has repeatedly said it is not inclined to use Justice Department resources against medical marijuana users and providers who comply with state law. It is hard to say who is being more inconsistent: a president who promised tolerance but delivered a crackdown or members of Congress who portray themselves as defenders of the 10th Amendment but forsake federalism because they are offended by a plant.
During his first presidential campaign, Barack Obama repeatedly signaled that he would take a less repressive approach to medical marijuana than George W. Bush had. Campaigning in New Hampshire during the summer of 2007, Obama said raiding patients who use marijuana as a medicine "makes no sense" and is "really not a good use of Justice Department resources." In a March 2008 interview with southern Oregon's Mail Tribune, he went further, saying, "I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to try to circumvent state laws on this issue." Two months later, when another Oregon paper, Willamette Week, asked Obama whether he would "stop the DEA's raids on Oregon medical marijuana growers," he replied, "I would, because I think our federal agents have better things to do."
Critics of the war on drugs were therefore puzzled that DEA raids on medical marijuana providers continued after Obama took office in 2009, even as the White House reaffirmed that "federal resources should not be used to circumvent state laws" and Attorney General Eric Holder claimed to be implementing that policy. "The policy is to go after those people who violate both federal and state law," Holder declaredduring a March 2009 session with reporters in Washington. "Given the limited resources that we have," he said during a visit to Albuquerque three months later, the Justice Department would focus on "large traffickers," not "organizations that are [distributing marijuana] in a way that is consistent with state law."
Deputy Attorney General David Ogden elaborated on that theme in an October 2009 memo, telling U.S. attorneys that "as a general matter" they "should not focus federal resources" on "individuals whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana." Ogden mentioned two specific classes of people who should be left alone: "individuals with cancer or other serious illnesses" and their caregivers. But he also listed criteria for federal prosecution, such as "sales to minors," "sale of other controlled substances," and "financial and marketing activities" inconsistent with state law, that make sense only when applied to suppliers. He warned that "claims of compliance with state or local law may mask operations inconsistent with the terms, conditions, or purposes of those laws"—meaning that federal prosecutors had to distinguish between bona fide medical marijuana dispensaries and fake ones.
Yet the DEA's raids continued. If anything, the pace picked up. Meanwhile, federal law enforcement officials such as Jeffrey Sweetin, the special agent in charge of the DEA's Denver office, and Melinda Haag, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California, publicly disavowed the notion that they needed to consider state law at all.
Pressed to explain the contradiction, the Justice Department issued another memo in June 2011. Backtracking in the guise of clarification, James Cole, Ogden's successor, insisted that prosecution threats against medical marijuana suppliers from Haag and other U.S. attorneys were "entirely consistent" with the Ogden memo, which he claimed applied only to patients and caregivers, meaning people "providing care to individuals with cancer or other serious illnesses, not commercial operations cultivating, selling or distributing marijuana." The Ogden memo's guidelines for distinguishing between genuine dispensaries and criminal fronts went down the memory hole, along with all of the assurances from Obama and Holder about respecting state law. In fact, since the Justice Department was now saying anyone but patients and caregivers was fair game for prosecution, Obama's policy was indistinguishable from Bush's.
Two years later came another DOJ memo and another reversal. This one was issued last August, after Obama was safely re-elected, after several more states had legalized medical marijuana, and after voters in Colorado and Washington, where cannabis was already allowed for medical use, decided to legalize it for recreational use as well. Still pretending merely to elaborate on what had always been a consistent policy, Cole said the Justice Department would not try to block legalization in Colorado and Washington as long as the new markets were properly regulated. He also suggested that it would not be a good use of DOJ resources to target marijuana businesses, whether medical or recreational, that comply with state law, provided they did not implicate any of eight "federal enforcement priorities," including prevention of interstate smuggling, violence, involvement by organized crime, and distribution to minors.
So far the Justice Department has indeed allowed legalization to proceed in Colorado, where state-licensed retailers have been selling marijuana since January, and in Washington, where growers have begun to produce marijuana for the recreational market and the first pot shops are supposed to open this summer. Yet the feds continue to go after medical marijuana growers and distributors, even when, as in the case of the Kettle Falls Five, they are clearly complying with state law. Hence the impetus for the amendment approved by the House last week, which aims to protect patients and providers from harassment, arrest, forfeiture, and prosecution.
My impression after following this story since 2007 is that Obama was sincere in saying state-legal patients and providers should be left alone but did not care enough about the issue to override resistance from the DEA and federal prosecutors (some of whom are more hostile to marijuana than others). Furthermore, he probably was surprised and embarrassed by the "Green Rush" that followed the 2009 Ogden memo, which encouraged many entrepreneurs to get into a business they otherwise would have considered too legally risky. But given growing public support for legalization (which got more votes in Colorado than Obama did in 2012), he decided it was best not to directly challenge that policy in states that choose to adopt it.
While Obama seems like a feckless and halfhearted supporter of marijuana federalism, most Republicans seem utterly unprincipled on this issue. Here is an opportunity to defend something they supposedly believe in—state autonomy under the Constitution—while simultaneously criticizing a Democratic administration and siding with a majority of Americans. In a recent Politico essay, Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, and Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, argue that opposing federal interference with medical marijuana is politically smart:
A recent Pew Research Center survey found that nearly three in four Americans—including 78 percent of Independents, 71 percent of Democrats and 67 percent of Republicans—believe that efforts to enforce marijuana laws cost more than they are worth. Similar numbers—80 percent of Democrats, 76 percent of Independents, and 61 percent of Republicans—favor making medical marijuana legally available.
The outlook for anti-pot Republicans looks even worse when you consider age trends. In a Gallup poll last fall, overall support for legalizing marijuana was 58 percent, including 67 percent of 18-to-29-year-olds and 62 percent of 30-to-49-year-olds. A CNN poll conducted in January put overall support for legalization at 55 percent and found a similar breakdown by age: Two-thirds of 18-to-34-year-olds said pot should be legal, and nearly as many 34-to-49-year-olds agreed. Are Republicans so blinded by anti-pot prejudice that they are willing to forsake political self-interest as well as principle?
Apparently yes. Not only have most Republicans failed to criticize the Obama administration's haphazardly heavy-handed approach to medical marijuana; many of them have faulted the administration for failing to block broader legalization in Colorado and Washington. They erroneously argue that using prosecutorial discretion to give states leeway on this issue violates the president's constitutional duty to uphold federal law. "Federal law takes precedence" over state law, Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.) told Holder during a congressional hearing last month. "The state of Colorado is undermining…federal law, correct? Why do you fail to enforce the laws of the land?" Not surprisingly, Smith voted against the medical marijuana amendment last week.
During the floor debate on the amendment, opponents questioned the medical benefits of marijuana and argued that allowing patients to use it is a prelude to broader legalization. Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) cited opposition from professional medical organizations, while Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.) argued that "it's the camel's nose under the tent." Yet neither of these arguments has anything to do with whether the federal government has the authority to stop states from allowing medical use of cannabis if that is what their legislators or voters decide to do. For a true federalist, this is the crucial question. Whether or not Wolf and Harris think medical marijuana laws are a good idea, our system of government does not allow them to impose that judgment on the states.
As reflected in last week's vote, there is a growing number of honorable exceptions to this overbearing, centralizing Republican tendency. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), who introduced the medical marijuana amendment, has been backing such legislation for more than a decade. This year he was joined by conservative Republicans such as Tom McClintock (Calif.), Paul Broun (Ga.), and Steve Stockman (Texas). Last year Rohrabacher introduced the Respect State Marijuana Laws Act, which goes further, declaring that the provisions of the Controlled Substances Act dealing with cannabis "shall not apply to any person acting in compliance with state laws." Republican cosponsors of that bill include Stockman, Justin Amash (Mich.), Don Young (Alaska), Thomas Massie (Ky.), and Duncan Hunter (Calif.).
Before Rohrabacher's amendment was approved, he urged his Republican colleagues to be true to their avowed principles. "For those of us who routinely talk about the 10th Amendment, which we do in conservative ranks, and respect for state laws, this amendment should be a no-brainer," he said. "Our amendment gives all of us an opportunity to show our constituents that we are truly constitutionalists and that we mean what we say when we talk about the importance of the 10th Amendment."
Norquist and Nadelmann likewise argued that it "ought to be an easy 'yes' vote for members of the 10th Amendment Task Force on Capitol Hill and other believers in limited government and federalism." The task force, founded in 2010, is a project of the Republican Study Committee (RSC), where conservative legislators are supposed to develop policies consistent with their principles. How many members of the RSC task force devoted to the 10th Amendment voted for federalism last week? According to a tally by the Drug Policy Alliance, 10 out of 47. That's 21 percent, up from 11 percent in 2012. It looks like Republicans may be gradually recovering from a cannabis-induced fog that made them forget the Constitution.
This article originally appeared at Forbes.
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Congress delegates to the executive the power to make rules with the force of law, and the only way to put a check on those rules is to withhold money?
Like petulant teenagers, it's the only thing they understand.
Does it matter. Reid isn't going to let it come in the Senate.
Is there a 'personal liberty infringement' draft that I don't know about where the Teams get together and decide which insults to liberty are 'theirs'?
"With the first pick of the PLI draft Team Red chooses the War on Drugs...."
I'm not sure, but I'm imagining it in the style of Dave Chappelle's Racial Draft and I'm laughing. Somebody needs to put a comedy sketch like that together.
Start working from home with Google. I make money in my ?p?r? tim?! I have been unemployed f?r months but n?w i m??? up to $100/day on the computer. pop over to this website http://www.Fox81.com
I'm pleasantly surprised we got as many Rs on our side of this issue as we did. Neocons don't believe in federalism, and socons lose their shit any time prohibition is challenged on any way. How many team red politicians are left when you take out the neocons and the socons?
Great bunches who aren't any more interested in rocking the boat on social issues than their Democratic compatriots are in reforming welfare.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pa.....-be-legal/
I guess Pat Robertson loses his SoCon status then.
"Less than three in 10 white evangelicals (29 percent) favor the legalization of pot, compared with 40 percent of Catholics, 40 percent of minority Christians, and 49 percent of mainline Protestants.
On the other end of the spectrum are the religiously unaffiliated: two-thirds (66 percent) favor legalization"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/.....54849.html
Take a stab at authentic conservatism? Champion the cause of federalism? Play a role in limiting a spectacularly abusive arm of government?
Nah. Let's continue playing to the crowd of voters who make boomers seem relevant.
Republicans will continue to pretend to be in favor of small government and Democrats will continue to be in favor of personal freedom.
What the fuck squirrels?
Did you mean Democrats will PRETEND to be in favor of personal freedom?
I sure did.
On some non-economic issues yes. I'm from northern Florida. Socons fucking suck. People complain (and rightfully so) that there's a statue of Lenin in Seattle yet there are fucking crosses everywhere in America. BOTH statues of Lenin and religious symbols represent oppression.
As long as they're both on private property, I don't really care what people put up.
Unless it's a statue of Warty and his Doomcock.
I'm drafting in my head a letter to my Republican state representative Steven Pearce, who did not cross the line to vote with his Democratic colleagues, something to that effect: conservatives who fail to maintain individual liberty on this front are no better than liberals who think personal liberties end outside the front door.
The 1960s and the f***ing hippies have come home to "rule and roost." Before you know it, all sorts of drugs will be legalized and most of the populace will go around high on something. Congratulations hippies and beatniks! I knew you would be back in a Kerouac flash.
I don't know what YOU'RE high on, but I want some of it.
Does this mean that your are a f***ing hippie?
Poe's Law is in effect.
I wish prohibitionists were this brazen.
"Look, I know many of you have family members in prison, or made perpetual wards of the state due to their felony convictions, because they made mistakes in their past. I know many of you have had your homes raided, your cars searched, or your children's backpacks emptied in the largely failed attempt to prevent the proliferation of drug paraphernalia. Maybe you know a neighbor whose kid was shot during a no-knock raid by heavily armed SWAT police. Maybe you've just heard on television news about infants burned in their cribs by incendiaries, or grandmothers shot by cops raiding the wrong address, or state police confiscating cash and assets by virtue of drug-related forfeiture laws.
"For those who harbor concerns about these apparent abuses, I want to say to you: it's all been worth it if it puts just one hippy scumbag from the 60s-era pro-pot rallies in prison. It's been worth the families destroyed, communities upset, pets killed, and young men, especially the black ones, made perpetually unemployable due to their criminal records. It's been entirely worth championing a police state of warrior cops with diminishingly little accountability if just one child spends the last few years of his youth in and out of juvie halls or foster programs."
the need for this amendment under a Democratic administration that has repeatedly said it is not inclined to use Justice Department resources against medical marijuana users and providers who comply with state law.
I think the explanation is pretty obvious, myself.
And given this Administration's proven lawlessness, I have no expectation that Congress can rein them in.
In my fetid gut I think that if the Rs would get out ahead of this marijuana jazz and take it from the Ds they would win oh so many votes and lose so very few.
It should be noted that the Tea Party Caucus overwhelmingly voted against the recent amendment to HR 4660 which would stop the Justice Department from taking actions against states that have legalized MMJ. 37 voted against the amendment and only 10 voted Aye.
The Tea Party Caucus didn't even vote in favor of an amendment to stop funding Justice Department actions against States that allow industrial hemp. 32 TP Caucus members voted No on this amendment to HR 4660. Only 16 voted Aye.
Small federal government and States' rights principles? Doesn't seem like it.
Really, the only reasons for where conservatives and liberals are on drug prohibition are inertia and a gut reaction due to historical coincidence. Liberals are for legalization because drugs were associated with the 60s counterculture, and conservatives take the opposite view for the exact same reason. Nostalgia, and anti-nostalgia. For pretty much all "should people be free to consume this substance?" questions, the positions are reversed -- tobacco, alcohol, salt, soda, fats, transfats, energy drinks, whatever.
If marijuana had never been illegal and was being sold commercially like everything else, we'd see liberals railing against Big Cannabis and accusing R. J. Reynolds of using its Mary Jane cartoon mascot to target children.
"Obama's policy was indistinguishable from Bush's."
Policy yes. But Obama increased the raids by a factor of 5X (IIRC).
I think Obama's had a secret fling with Michelle Leonhart. That's the only reason I can think of for this marijuana policy mess.
I've noticed that articles written on the Right about the issue have become increasing pro-federalism (if not outright calling for decriminalization or legalization), especially since reports on the drop in crime and lack of medical issues have come out from Colorado -- many wonks or analysts who were on the fence have moved over to a more libertarian position. If my observation of previous interactions of conservative writing/policy proves apt, you'll start to see more of a migration intellectually among officeholders and candidates on the issue (Left or Right, there's always a delay in feeling on these sort of things within a party coalition).
Smith is bought and paid for by Prohibitionist lobbyists
We'd all be better off if the police focused on crimes that have actual victims!
Does anyone honestly believe that wasting $20 Billion and arresting 3/4 Million Americans annually for choosing a substance Scientifically proven to be safer than what the govt allows, is a sound policy?