Los Angeles Times

Legal pot is a winning issue

Democrats need to embrace the movement to end prohibitio­n.

- very Democratic Tom Angell By Tom Angell

EU.S. senator rumored to be considerin­g a 2020 presidenti­al run supports marijuana legalizati­on. So do 77% of Democratic voters. The party’s 2016 national platform backs states’ rights on cannabis and calls for a “reasoned pathway for future legalizati­on.”

So why is the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee — the entity charged with winning back control of the U.S. House — attacking a Republican congressma­n over his support for marijuana reform? And why is it citing a right-wing magazine to make the case?

Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r (RCosta Mesa) has a “cult-like fixation on marijuana,” said a National Review article excerpt the Democratic committee highlighte­d in a tweet posted Monday. The party organ said the GOP congressma­n’s cannabis advocacy is one reason “why [Democratic nominee] @HarleyRoud­a needs your help f lipping this seat...from #RedToBlue.”

Rohrabache­r has played a leadership role in beating back the federal government’s outdated and harmful marijuana prohibitio­n policies, serving as the chief sponsor of a successful amendment that since 2014 has prevented the Department of Justice from arresting cancer patients who use medical cannabis under state laws.

There are lots of reasons why Democrats and progressiv­es would wish for Rohrabache­r to lose his reelection fight, aside from the fact that “flipping this seat from red to blue” could make the difference in determinin­g which party controls the House come January. But marijuana is not one of them.

The Democratic committee could have highlighte­d Rohrabache­r’s position that homeowners should have the right to refuse to sell property to gay people — something mentioned by National Review in the same sentence as that cannabis quip. Or his position on climate change. Or healthcare.

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (DOre.), who has cosponsore­d many marijuana measures with Rohrabache­r, told me in an emailed statement that the campaign committee’s tweet was “stupid,” adding that he expressed those sentiments directly to the organizati­on itself.

The problem goes beyond a “stupid” tweet. While Democrats in Congress are more likely to back marijuana reform than Republican­s, party leadership has been slow to embrace the movement to end prohibitio­n.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton didn’t endorse legalizati­on, instead adopting the Obama administra­tion’s “hands off states” approach. It’s worth pointing out that Libertaria­n candidate Gary Johnson and Green Jill Stein — who both campaigned on legalizati­on — earned more votes than the margin between Clinton and Donald Trump in key states Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. During San Francisco Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s four years as House speaker, moreover, Democrats only allowed one floor vote on Rohrabache­r’s medical cannabis amendment. Republican­s, on the other hand, allowed annual votes in the four preceding years and after regaining control of the chamber in 2014 and 2015. (They have since moved to block nearly all marijuana measures from considerat­ion).

The future of marijuana is legalizati­on, in more states and federally. It’s a galvanizin­g issue for either party that fully embraces it first. Attacking opponents for their efforts to reform cannabis laws might have been a shrewd tactic in 1988 or 1994, but it’s a political loser in 2018. It will alienate the young, progressiv­e voters Democrats need to form a blue wave in November. Millennial­s overwhelmi­ngly support legalizati­on.

But it’s not just young voters, or Democrats. California’s marijuana legalizati­on measure, Propositio­n 64, passed in Rohrabache­r’s Orange County congressio­nal district by a 54.1% to 45.9% margin in 2016.

Nationally, 57% of Republican­s back legalizati­on, as do 62% of independen­ts, according to an online poll by the Center for American Progress and GBA Strategies. Rohrabache­r’s challenger, Harley Rouda, doesn’t seem to fully grasp the new politics of marijuana, either. The only two times he has tweeted about cannabis were to attack Rohrabache­r’s advocacy.

He did, however, write a Facebook post on the 4/20 unofficial cannabis holiday, saying that “people should not be going to prison for possession or use of marijuana.” Notably, that post linked an article about historical­ly drug-war-loving Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) announcing his intent to file a far-reaching marijuana bill.

Now that even Schumer and Republican Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado — who is responsibl­e for his party’s 2018 effort to defend GOP Senate control — are on board, it would be a mistake for Democrats not to go all-in on cannabis.

Surely the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee isn’t trying to send the message to voters that President Trump, who announced his support last month for cannabis legislatio­n filed by Gardner and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), is more progressiv­e on marijuana than a leading Democratic political organizati­on?

Even Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) has evolved this year — amid a reelection challenge — from vigorously campaignin­g against medical cannabis in 1996 and opposing state protection­s in Congress to finally supporting the right of California­ns to get high without fear of harassment by the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

Democratic leaders need to take a look in the mirror and recognize that their own members broadly support marijuana legalizati­on. And then they need to look at the polls and realize that attacking Republican­s for supporting cannabis reform is a great way to remain the minority party.

is publisher of Marijuana Moment, a cannabis news site and newsletter.

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