Waikato Times

Weed vote will rally the young at 2020 election

- Glenn McConnell Vice Marijuana Media Weediquett­e.

The cannabis referendum is a gamechange­r. It is a debate that needs to be had, one which cannabis advocates have been fizzing to ignite. It has also been a debate which our Parliament has been steadfast in avoiding, until 2020.

This week, the Government confirmed a referendum at the 2020 election on legalising personal cannabis use. But if we’re honest, the referendum itself is little more than a political honey-pot. It’s a sweetener for the young voters the Left needs support from. If the Left were serious about drug law reform, then we’d be talking about how to make the most out of cannabis.

We should be talking about how to improve drug law, en masse. City streets are filled with people suffering due to an addiction to synthetic cannabis – maybe the real deal will help? But those discussion­s seem a long way off.

There is a mounting and genuine argument in favour of legalising recreation­al marijuana use. No longer can those calling for cannabis legalisati­on be ignored as dropouts or hippy stoners.

Medical profession­als, lawyers, social workers, business people, and yes, stoners, join a fairly united chorus when it comes marijuana. They say it’s time to reform our drug laws. Their arguments make sense. Whether proponents focus on tax revenue, the justice system, business opportunit­ies or the classic ‘‘weed is better than alcohol’’ argument, they all have valid points.

The weed debate crosses New Zealand. Young and old, rich and poor, you’ll find legalisati­on supporters anywhere. I’m not quite sure, then, why we’re waiting until 2020 to get cracking on cannabis reform.

Once again, as far as I can see, this decision seems to be all about politics. The Green Party pushed for the referendum during confidence and supply talks after the last election. Come 2020, an issue they’ve brought to the table will be centre stage – good for the Greens.

Meanwhile, NZ First can play it safe. It’s not making any decisions, the public is.

And Labour’s strategist­s must be patting themselves on the back for drawing out the weed debate to the 2020 election. The Left has a love-hate fascinatio­n with the elusive youth vote.

A day out from the 2017 election, and there was worry from Labour that it mightn’t make it across the line. Veteran political reporter turned Labour spin doctor Vernon Small said many were pinning their hopes on ‘‘the hidden youth vote’’ and late enrolments.

Globally, Left-leaning parties have struggled to entice young voters to polling booths. Those younger voters are presumed to be progressiv­e and therefore Left-leaning themselves. What better way to rally the progressiv­e youth vote than hold a weed referendum on election day?

Arguments against reform tend to rely on old stereotype­s that pot smokers are worthless, longbearde­d stoners who shouldn’t be listened to.

It is, of course, wrong to say the green stuff suddenly turns its smokers into lazy life-long nohopers.

The pointless and harmful criminalis­ation of weed smokers has acted to engage youth with politics – that is perhaps its only positive outcome.

An entire show, every week on student radio station 95bFM is dedicated to marijuana and its impending referendum. They’ve been preparing for this referendum since before the 2017 election.

The hosts of tie in cooking classes, political panels and satire to fill their weekly drive-time segment. Likewise, youth media outlet has an entire Sky television channel that pretty much survives off broadcasti­ng shows such as

Considerin­g the near inevitabil­ity that weed will be legal for recreation­al use at some point, and the fact that current drug laws have failed, Justice Minister Andrew Little should have explained why he is waiting until 2020.

Some important discussion­s must be had. There are real concerns with the possible commercial­isation of marijuana.

Comparison­s could be drawn between the alcohol and gambling industries. With alcohol, the companies rely on 20 per cent of their customers to consume 80 per cent of their product.

The Government must start looking for answers. Who will sell and produce cannabis, if it were legal? How much tax will they take? What measures will be in place to help those who need it? How can we make sure cannabis doesn’t end up a scourge on society, like alcohol has?

Let’s hope those questions can be answered before the election. Once we’ve answered those questions, however, there’s really no need for a referendum.

Just because it’s a popular discussion point doesn’t mean cannabis law needs to be treated any differentl­y from other health issues.

Young and old, rich and poor, you’ll find legalisati­on supporters anywhere. I’m not quite sure, then, why we’re waiting until 2020 to get cracking on cannabis reform.

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