Execute drug dealers and use ‘the wall’ to get opioids off US streets, says Trump
DONALD TRUMP has said he wants to change the law to allow “big drug pushers” to face the death penalty.
Under current US legislation only murder is a capital crime but Mr Trump said: “We have to change the laws.
“The Department of Justice is working very hard on that. This isn’t about nice anymore. Toughness is the thing they (drug dealers) most fear. That toughness includes the death penalty.”
The US president said there should be “zero tolerance” and that he could not personally understand why anyone would be opposed to executing dealers who “kill thousands of people over their lifetime”.
Speaking at the announcement of his long-awaited plan to combat America’s opioid crisis, he said: “Together we will end the scourge of drug addiction once and for all.
“We will do whatever we have to do but we’re going to win. We’ll build the wall to keep the damn drugs out. We will raise a drug-free generation of American children.”
In a speech in New Hampshire, one of the worst affected states for opioid
abuse, he promised “great commercials” during the “right shows” in the manner of anti-smoking campaigns.
The president also unveiled a website – crisisnextdoor.gov – which he said would warn of the dangers of opioids such as fentanyl.
Mr Trump said Congress would spend $6billion tackling the problem of opioid abuse next year, and that he was considering having the US government sue big drug companies which manufacture potent opioids. Television adverts would also “scare” young people away from abusing drugs, he said.
The White House will ask Congress to lower the amount of drugs an offender needs to possess to make them eligible for certain minimum jail sentences. In addition, the plan aims to reduce by one third the amount of opioid prescriptions handed out by doctors over the next three years.
Mr Trump said his vision included more help for addicts by expanding access to treatment facilities.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 42,000 people died from opioid overdoses in the US in 2016, many of them from fentanyl which has flooded states including New Hampshire.
Mr Trump chose the state for the launch amid speculation he could face a 2020 primary challenge from a fellow Republican. New Hampshire will be the first state primary when the Republican party selects its nominee, and Mr Trump’s ratings have fallen there.
Two possible challengers, Senator Jeff Flake and John Kasich, the Ohio governor, have also made visits to the state.