Toronto Star

Quebec parties spar over pot

Front-runners in provincial election would hike legal age to 21

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL— The Coalition Avenir Québec is standing firm on a promise to raise the minimum age for cannabis consumptio­n in the province to 21.

Recreation­al marijuana use is set to become the law of the land about two weeks after the Oct. 1 Quebec election.

François Legault says his front-running Coalition party will hike the legal age to 21 from 18 if it wins the election.

That would make Quebec the only province with such a limit, with most others having adopted 18 or 19 as their minimum age.

“It’s terrible what cannabis can do to youth,” Legault said on a campaign stop Friday. “We shouldn’t be trivializi­ng youth cannabis use.”

Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard responded by saying the Coalition proposal makes little sense and he has no intention of changing the age limit if he is re-elected premier.

“Why is it that people can vote at 18, can make their own decisions and would not be allowed to use a now legal product?” Couillard asked.

“I think we should trust our youth — I trust the judgment of young Quebecers and I don’t want to trivialize this issue of cannabis, but if you’re old enough to vote, you’re old enough to decide whether you want to use a legal product or not.”

Couillard added that Legault is delusional if he believes Quebecers between 18 and 21 currently have a problem getting cannabis. He added those under 21 would simply buy it from organized crime groups such as the Hells Angels.

Recreation­al marijuana use is to become legal in Canada as of Oct. 17. The federal government said the move will protect youth from the risks of cannabis and keep organized crime from profiting from its production and sale.

Ottawa previously delayed the timetable for lifting the almost century-old prohibitio­n on marijuana at the request of three of the larger provinces, including Quebec, which asked for more time to make the transition to a legal regime for regulating the production, distributi­on and consumptio­n of cannabis.

Last June, Quebec passed its own cannabis law to limit the amount of cannabis that can be purchased at one time to 30 grams as well as to cap the amount of dried cannabis people can have at home to 150 grams.

Quebec also joined Manitoba in forbidding production or cultivatio­n of marijuana at home, at least for the time being.

The Coalition voted against the bill, with Legault’s party critical of the legal age as well as the fact that rules for smoking pot in public were being left to municipali­ties.

The Parti Québécois also voted against the legislatio­n because the sovereignt­ist party wants Quebec, and not Ottawa, to control the production of cannabis.

Provincial elections have had an impact on marijuana rules elsewhere.

In Ontario, the new Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government announced this month it was reversing plans to sell pot only in publicly owned outlets, opting instead to sell recreation­al cannabis in private stores.

“Why is it that people can vote at 18 ... and would not be allowed to use a now legal product?”

PHILIPPE COUILLARD LIBERAL LEADER

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Coalition Leader François Legault laughs as he greets customers at a restaurant during a campaign stop in Chateaugua­y, Que., on Friday.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS Coalition Leader François Legault laughs as he greets customers at a restaurant during a campaign stop in Chateaugua­y, Que., on Friday.

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