Pubdate: Sun, 20 Sep 2015
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2015 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: John Frank

POT NOW A MAJOR TOPIC IN ELECTION

Candidates Can No Longer Dodge or Dismiss the Issue.

The 2016 campaign is spawning a new axiom in presidential politics: 
You can't spell POTUS without pot.

For the first time, marijuana is becoming a significant policy issue 
for Republican and Democratic candidates - thanks in part to 
softening public attitudes toward the drug and Colorado's prominent 
place on the political map.

"(Marijuana) is a topic that 2016 presidential candidates will not be 
able to avoid or dismiss with a pithy talking point," said John 
Hudak, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, a think tank whose 
research has focused on the legalization push. "It is one that 
candidates will have to think about and engage."

In the Republican primary, the candidates are making marijuana an 
issue on their own. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said he would 
enforce federal laws to crack down on pot use in states such as 
Colorado. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul became the first major candidate to 
attend a fundraiser with the weed industry in his recent Denver visit.

But pot politics hit prime time with an extended exchange in last 
week's GOP debate on CNN, which drew an audience of 23 million.

The focus on the topic is likely to intensify as the campaign trail 
leads to Colorado for the next GOP debate, in October.

"It's a national debate that's occurring, and Colorado has led the 
way," said U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican who opposed 
legalization.

On the GOP side, he said, "I don't think you can talk about the 
states' rights issue without talking about the biggest states' rights 
issue of modern time."

The Republican debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library 
served as an appropriate backdrop to mark marijuana's evolution. 
Three decades ago, Reagan championed the "war on drugs" and first 
lady Nancy Reagan popularized the "Just Say No" campaign.

The taboo remained when then-candidate Bill Clinton admitted in 1992 
that he tried marijuana with the qualifier, "But I didn't inhale."

But the public's mood is shifting. In 2013, Gallup found a 58 percent 
majority of Americans favored legalizing marijuana, for the first 
time. And this year, the well-regarded polling firm reported that 44 
percent of Americans acknowledged they tried weed, the highest ever.

"In years past, marijuana was being brought up as sort of a gotcha 
question," Hudak said in an interview. The most recent debate "was 
really the first time in a presidential debate that marijuana was 
brought up as a public policy."

For Republicans, the issue remains a challenge, perplexing a number 
of candidates who have taken contradictory positions on the issue at 
different times.

Josh Penry, a Colorado adviser to Republican candidate Marco Rubio, 
said it's an important issue that is here to stay.

"It becomes a proxy to argue, 'Are you consistent or are you not 
consistent on these issues?' " he said. "I think it will continue to 
percolate in the national election, in part because of the importance 
of Colorado."

In the debate, a few candidates engaged on the issue; others remained 
on the sidelines. The question, which the moderator said originated 
on social media, forced former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to confess 
marijuana use in high school and served as a litmus test for the 
other candidates.

Paul cast it as a measure of conservatism, saying he supports a 
state's right to legalize weed and suggested the enforcement pledged 
by Christie is federal overreach.

"I personally think this is a crime where the only victim is the 
individual," Paul said of marijuana use. "And I think America has to 
take a different attitude."

Bush opposed a 2014 ballot measure in Florida to legalize medical 
marijuana, but he agreed it's a state issue.

"What goes on in Colorado, as far as I'm concerned, that should be a 
state decision," he said.

Carly Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, voiced concern 
about marijuana legalization. She invoked the story of her daughter's 
death after addiction to alcohol and prescription pills.

"We must invest more in the treatment of drugs," she said. "I agree 
with Sen. Paul. I agree with states' rights. But we are misleading 
people when we tell them that marijuana is just like having a beer - it's not."

The comparison is a misnomer to the cannabis industry, but Gina 
Carbone, a co-founder of Smart Colorado, a group that wants greater 
protections for children, said it was an important moment.

"I think everyone needed to hear that kind of thing because that is 
exactly what we in Colorado are facing," she said.

On the Democratic side, the legalization issue is a measure of 
liberalism, but so far the candidates are staking out middle ground.

The Marijuana Policy Project recently issued a report card on the 
stances of the candidates and is watching the election closely as it 
seeks to educate and influence both parties, said Mason Tvert, the 
group's communications director.

A day after the debate, Democratic candidate Martin O'Malley visited 
Denver to meet with pot industry supporters and learn more about 
Colorado's system.

"We should have this conversation and be informed by the true facts 
and the experience the people of Colorado are having on the ground 
here," he said of marijuana legalization.

O'Malley and rival Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders support 
decriminalization moves and medical marijuana. But Democratic 
front-runner Hillary Clinton is more cautious. All say they are 
watching Colorado for guidance.

Eric Sondermann, a Denver-based political analyst, said this 
attention is "both good news and bad news."

"On the plus side, Colorado continues to be at the epicenter of the 
political world," he said. "On the more problematic side, many 
leaders - starting with the governor and the economic development 
community - continue to be worried about pot being so increasingly 
central to the Colorado brand."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom