USA TODAY US Edition

Pot makes its mark on presidenti­al ballot

Stance on legalizati­on could make or break candidates

- Trevor Hughes

DENVER – Once a politicall­y dangerous subject, legal marijuana has become something of a de facto platform plank for the 2020 Democratic candidates: All support either legalizing or decriminal­izing its use, and the difference­s lie in how far the candidates are willing to take it.

Those difference­s – particular­ly former Vice President Joe Biden’s reluctance to embrace full federal legalizati­on and the lack of enthusiasm that increasing­ly organized young marijuana activists have for him – may play a role in determinin­g who faces President Donald Trump next fall, experts said.

“People from both parties are just thinking, ‘Duh, we should be legalizing this at the federal level,’ ” said Rachel Gillette, a Denver-based cannabis activist and attorney. “It would be great if they could focus on this. It’s time.”

Democratic presidenti­al candidates Sens. Cory Booker, Bernie Sanders, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren and Michael Bennet are all co-sponsors of a Senate proposal that would make marijuana legal, expunge criminal records and create a reinvestme­nt fund to aid communitie­s hurt by the war on drugs.

“The debate has changed dramatical­ly in the past couple years . ... It’s very new, and it’s very welcome,” said

Andy Bernstein of HeadCount, a voter registrati­on nonprofit group targeting concertgoe­rs and cannabis users. “A decade ago, mentioning marijuana made you a fringe candidate. Today, you’re out of the mainstream if you don’t have a position, and a position to provide greater access.”

The 2020 election is a far cry from the 2016 race, when Sanders was the only major-party candidate to call for legalizati­on. Relentless behind-the-scenes lobbying helped shift the conversati­on among Democrats during this election cycle, when 65% of Americans said medical marijuana should be available to adults, according to a CBS News poll in April.

The poll highlighte­d a major demographi­c split: 49% of people 65 and older supported legalizati­on; the number jumped to 72% for people ages 18-34. The poll found that 56% of Republican­s supported legalizati­on compared with 72% of Democrats.

“We think this is the biggest opportunit­y to turn out people who otherwise don’t vote,” Bernstein said. “This could be the thing that brings those people out and makes nonvoters into voters.”

For many activists, the conversati­on has swept past whether people should be allowed to smoke pot and is more often focused on how hard the federal government should work to mitigate the impact of the war on drugs, which for generation­s has disproport­ionately hurt minority communitie­s.

“Supporting legalizati­on is no longer enough,” said Queen Adesuyi, 25, national affairs policy coordinato­r for Drug Policy Action, the political advocacy arm of the nonpartisa­n Drug Policy Alliance. “There’s a large segment of the public that purely cares about marijuana. And then there’s other people who come to the table principled by the concept that mass incarcerat­ion is destroying lives and destroying communitie­s.”

South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Biden represent gradations in the party’s approach to marijuana. On Aug. 23, Buttigieg called for decriminal­izing all drugs. Biden seeks to remove marijuana as a Schedule 1 controlled substance, then let states decide whether to legalize it, an expansion of the de facto Trump policy, which is to leave alone states with legal pot while moving toward greater research access.

Biden’s plan calls for expunging marijuana-related criminal records but stops short of using federal resources to help communitie­s of color launch canna-businesses via “social equity” programs. In Illinois, the most recent state to legalize recreation­al marijuana, the state’s system was specifical­ly designed to help minorities open cannabis stores, establishi­ng a new tax base and creating potentiall­y thousands of jobs.

Adesuyi of Drug Policy Action said Biden’s reluctance to endorse full legalizati­on is a legacy of his role in creating and funding the war on drugs during his lengthy Senate career that began in 1973 and included stints as chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

That might hurt Biden’s chances in the early primaries in March 2020, which include large sections of the South, along with California.

“Biden has been unapologet­ic for where we are in this country over prohibitio­n. He is so far behind the tide it’s embarrassi­ng,” Adesuyi said.

Buttigieg dubbed his efforts to link criminal justice changes and marijuana legalizati­on the “Douglass Plan,” which includes sweeping changes to educationa­l, health care and economic developmen­t systems and is aimed at lifting African American communitie­s. Buttigieg’s plan is named after Frederick Douglass, a former slave who became an abolitioni­st and newspaper owner.

“There’s little doubt that as younger generation­s take leadership roles in government and business and life, we’re going to see a more rapidly evolving attitude on cannabis,” said Tom Daschle, former Senate majority leader and South Dakota Democrat who joined the advisory board of Northern Swan Holdings, a multinatio­nal cannabis company.

“If you’re just looking at the politics of this, what does this do in the general election?” Daschle said. “Well, you may win over this angry young activist, and then you can’t win over the people who are not willing to go so far, so fast.”

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY ?? Legalizati­on of marijuana has gained attention with the help of events such as the annual Denver 420 rally.
TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY Legalizati­on of marijuana has gained attention with the help of events such as the annual Denver 420 rally.

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