Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Page: A6 Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Author: Tim Harper, Ottawa Bureau ALLIANCE BACKERS STILL HIGH ON DAY Pot Confession No Big Deal In Caucus OTTAWA - The news that a one-time dope smoker was in their midst caused no shock, no shift in support, no sermonizing on the evils of marijuana in the Canadian Alliance caucus yesterday. In fact, the collective shrug may mean it's time to finally put the "did you inhale" question in the closet, for good. Those backing Stockwell Day in the Canadian Alliance race instead applauded their man's honesty when he told reporters in Woodstock this week that he smoked marijuana 30 years ago. And he inhaled. "I wish I knew. I would've signed on sooner," joked Rod Love, a key Day strategist. None of his backers yesterday admitted to similar experimentation, but no one backing Preston Manning's top Alberta challenger thought such candour could possibly hurt their candidate. Even British Columbia MP Randy White, who has crusaded against drug abuse, was completely unmoved at the news. "My concern is people who are pushing heroin and crack cocaine," he said. "It was thirty years ago. Come on. "I'm sure if you polled all MPs in the House of Commons, you might get some interesting responses if they were all as honest as Stockwell." A straw poll of Day backers in the Alliance caucus, however, turned up only Edmonton MP and House of Commons deputy speaker Ian McClelland among those who have rolled their own. "I think people are more interested in honesty than perfection," McClelland said. "If they put all of us who had ever smoked pot in prison, we'd have a good time. Frontrunner Manning recently told an Ottawa high school audience that he had never smoked marijuana and had never been tempted. A spokesperson for Tom Long, who is expected to formally announce his candidacy next week, said Long will answer such questions next week. "Never assume," said Sandra Buckler. Other Day backers conceded their candidate had slipped into territory alien to them. "I did a lot of things when I was 19 that I don't particularly want to share," said Myron Thompson, the Alliance MP (Wild Rose) who backs Day. "But marijuana wasn't one them. . . . I didn't even know what it was." Ian Brodie, a University of Western Ontario student and Alliance party executive member, said the marijuana question "has become a little tedious. "The Alliance race is all about organization and selling membership and getting out the vote. It's not about who did or did not smoke a joint 30 years ago." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake