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Bennet Kelley

(142 posts)
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 09:50 PM Feb 2015

The DC Marijuana Battle: It's About More Than Weed

The battle between Congress and the District of Columbia over its new voter approved marijuana legalization initiative may seem esoteric at first blush. That is because the current debate centers on when the District law was deemed enacted in order to determine whether it has violated a Congressional restriction on use of funds to "enact any law, rule, or regulation to legalize or otherwise reduce penalties associated with" controlled substances.

Should the debate move beyond semantics, this confrontation could result in a very significant, consequential and long overdue debate both about marijuana policy in the United States and about Washington's continued status as the nation's last colony.

The Battle of Dates


To understand this debate you have appreciate the importance of a few key dates. The first is November 4, 2014 when seventy percent (70%) of District of Columbia voters approved Initiative 71 legalizing possession of up to two ounces of marijuana (and this results was duly certified on December 3, 2014).

The second date is December 9, 2014 which is when President Obama signed an appropriation bill containing a provision from Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) prohibiting the use of federal or local funds to "enact any law . . . reducing penalties associated with" any controlled substances.

Now comes the third date - February 27, 1801. That is the date that President John Adams signed the Organic Act placing the District of Columbia under the exclusive control of Congress. In 1973, Congress passed the Home Rule Act allowing the District the ability to elect a Mayor and City Council but providing that all laws enacted were subject to review and rejection by Congress during a review period of thirty (30) legislative days.

The final date is February 26, 2015. That was the last day of the review period and hence the law's effective date since Congress took no action to override it.

The District contends it did not violate the Harris amendment since the law was already enacted when the President signed it into law. The House Committee on Government Oversight contends a District law is enacted only once the review period has ended and therefore even the transmittal of the law to Congress was unlawful. They have even suggested that the Mayor could be arrested for violating the Deficiency Act.

The Real Debate Part 1


While Congress and Washington Mayor Bowser debate the intricacies of when a District law is "enacted", the prospect of legalized marijuana in the nation's capitol should spur great interest and hopefully debate.

The debate over what our policy on marijuana should be is long overdue. Marijuana was criminalized and made a controlled substance in 1937. President Nixon's National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse recommended the decriminalizing of private possession of marijuana in 1972, but both Nixon and Congress rejected their recommendations.

Jump forward forty plus years and marijuana prosecutions now clog our courts and fill our prisons with estimates that the U.S. would save nearly $8 billion per year in costs by legalizing marijuana combined with revenue projections for the taxation of marijuana ranging from $6 to $100 billion per year.

The War of Drugs, like any other war, has created real societal costs that should be evaluated. This is especially true in Washington that has one of the highest marijuana arrest rates in the nation.

The Real Debate Part 2

Frequently in such a debate, there is the notion that the states are laboratories of democracy that should be able to experiment or test what solutions work best for their communities. Not so in the colonial city of Washington where Congress has over the years intervened to prevent the District from, among other things, extending health benefits to registered domestic partners, funding abortions, establishing medical marijuana dispensaries, experimenting with needle exchanges or lobbying for representation in Congress.

All this from a body in which it has no voting representation. Unlike Puerto Rico and other territories who also have no voting representation but whose residents pay no federal income tax, the District pays more in federal taxes than 19 states and the most of any state on a per capita basis.

The U.N. Human Rights Commission and the Organization of American States' Commission on Human Rights each have found that the denial of voting rights to Washingtonians is a violation of the United States' human rights obligations under international law. Nonetheless, recent efforts to grant the District voting representation in Congress or even budgetary autonomy as to non-federal funds have gone nowhere.

So today Washingtonians play the familiar role of the pawn, this time in the resistance to updating our marijuana laws. Hopefully activists who engage to protect Washingtonian's right of self determination will see the bigger picture and recognize that it is not just our marijuana laws that are seriously antiquated.

While the Boston Tea Party was a spark that ended taxation without representation for most Americans, maybe it will be a different leaf that finally brings it to an end in Washington.

Bennet Kelley is a former Washington resident who has studied and written extensively on the history of Washington, D.C. home rule.

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Bagsgroove

(231 posts)
1. Principles
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:12 PM
Feb 2015

Obviously the Republicans have to fight the legalization of marijuana in DC because,
1 -- they believe in local control rather than the national government imposing its will on communities and,
2 -- they are the party of small, unobtrusive government that stays out of our lives.
(Insert sarcasm thingy here)

Anansi1171

(793 posts)
2. 3. Republicans and thier voter believe:
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:32 PM
Feb 2015

1) Marijuana = Blacks
2) D.C. = Blacks = Welfare = Big Gummint

Ergo - opposing MJ in DC is a continuation of their war on Blacks.

Remember, the Republicans in congress have sons and daughters lighting-up. Lee Atwater playbook here.

Panich52

(5,829 posts)
5. Spite may be additional motive
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 11:55 PM
Feb 2015

The threats to tge DC mayor, et al came from Utah rep. Utah is considering legalizing med weed. Utah fed rep can't do anything about his home state, so he takes it out on DC -- and reveals his hypocritical, dictatorial nature.

 

Scuba

(53,475 posts)
3. "The War of Drugs ... has created real societal costs ..." Yeah, but the benefits must outweigh ...
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:35 PM
Feb 2015
v

RKP5637

(67,112 posts)
4. Probably follow the money trail, much as with the underground drug
Sat Feb 28, 2015, 11:28 PM
Feb 2015

market, the white knights waging the inane stupid drug war cash in on the $$$$$'s too.

busterbrown

(8,515 posts)
6. Fuck those piece of shit Republicans
Sun Mar 1, 2015, 12:50 AM
Mar 2015

who feel D.C . should still be treated as though it is a plantation they own and run..

Jesus Christ these guys make me sick!!!

Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
7. someone posted President O will live in dc after he's done. We could start 'for profit' gardens &
Sun Mar 1, 2015, 10:08 AM
Mar 2015

elect President O our Mayor.

turn DC into farmland

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