LOS ANGELES â A growing list of Democratic presidential contenders want the U.S. government to legalize marijuana, reflecting a nationwide shift as more Americans look favourably on cannabis.
Making marijuana legal at the federal level is the âsmart thing to do,â says California Sen. Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor whose home state is the nationâs largest legal pot shop. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, a prominent legalization advocate on Capitol Hill, says the war on drugs has been a âwar on people.â
Former Texas Congressman Beto OâRourke, who appears poised to join the 2020 Democratic field, has written a book arguing marijuana legalization would hobble drug cartels. In an email to supporters this week, he called again to end the federal prohibition on marijuana.
âWho is going to be the last man â more likely than not a black man â to languish behind bars for possessing or using marijuana when it is legal in some form in more than half of the states in this country?â OâRourke wrote.
Itâs a far different approach from the not-so-distant past, when it was seen as politically damaging to acknowledge smoking pot and no major presidential candidate backed legalization.
In 1992, then-White House candidate Bill Clinton delivered a famously tortured response about a youthful dalliance with cannabis, claiming he tried it as a graduate student in England but âdidnât inhale.â And two decades before that, President Richard Nixon unleashed a war on marijuana and other drugs and it helped carry him to a second term.
This year, leading Democrats hold similar positions supporting legalization. Presidential hopefuls in the Senate who have co-sponsored Bookerâs legislation to end the federal prohibition include Harris, New Yorkâs Kirsten Gillibrand, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Vermontâs Bernie Sanders, who campaigned on decriminalizing pot in his 2016 presidential bid.
Another 2020 Democratic candidate, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, supports legalization and believes states should have the right to determine how to handle marijuana regulation within their borders but hasnât signed on to Bookerâs legislation.
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, who entered the contest this month, said in his announcement speech itâs âabout timeâ to legalize the drug nationally.
During his 2012 run for governor, Inslee opposed the ballot initiative that made Washington one of the first two states to legalize so-called recreational marijuana. As governor, however, he has frequently touted what he describes as Washingtonâs successful experiment with regulation and has urged the Obama and Trump administrations not to intervene. He recently began pardoning people with small-time marijuana convictions.
The widespread endorsement for national marijuana reform among Democrats tracks the nationâs evolving views.
In the late 1960s â the era of Woodstock and Vietnam â 12 per cent of Americans supported legalization, according to the Gallup poll. By last year, the figure hit a record 66 per cent. About 75 per cent of Democrats support legalization, along with a slim majority of Republicans.
Most Americans now live in states where marijuana is legal in some form. Pot dispensaries are familiar sights in cities like Los Angeles and Denver, and conservative strongholds like Utah and Oklahoma have established medical marijuana programs.
To Mason Tvert of the Marijuana Policy Project, a pro-legalization advocacy group, itâs not surprising thereâs broad support among candidates to end the federal prohibition.
âItâs no longer popular to be in favour of marijuana prohibition,â Tvert said.
But there are limits: âWe are not seeing any candidates saying, âI am currently a marijuana user,ââ he added.
The trajectory toward legal pot has come with generational change.
In a 2003 Democratic presidential forum, candidates John Kerry, John Edwards and Howard Dean acknowledged using marijuana in the past. Former President Barack Obama has been open about his youthful drug use, sometimes with a jab of humour: âWhen I was a kid, I inhaled. Frequently. That was the point,â he said in 2006.
In a recent radio interview on the syndicated âThe Breakfast Club,â Harris recalled smoking pot in her college days in the 1980s. She was an early supporter of medical marijuana but the Los Angeles Times reported that in 2010, the year she was elected California attorney general, that Harris opposed an initiative to more broadly legalize marijuana.
How potent the legal pot platform might be with voters in 2020 is only a guess.
Polls show some of the strongest support comes from younger voters. In California, millennials are now the largest generation among registered voters. However, younger voters are also the most likely to stay home on Election Day, said Paul Mitchell of Political Data Inc., a nonpartisan research firm.
President Donald Trumpâs position on cannabis remains somewhat opaque. He has said he supports laws legalizing medical marijuana but hasnât offered a definitive position on broader legalization.
In a departure from his predecessor, Jeff Sessions, new Attorney General William Barr has said he will ânot go afterâ marijuana companies in states where cannabis is legal, even though he personally believes the drug should be outlawed.
Standing somewhat apart from the Democratic field is the man who presided over one of the first legal recreational marijuana marketplaces in the nation, former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper.
Hickenlooper opposed the ballot measure that fully legalized marijuana in Colorado in 2012. But he said he accepted the will of the voters and won praise for implementing the measure. He says his âworst fearsâ about legalization havenât been realized and considers the system better than when the drug was illegal.
Still, Hickenlooper isnât willing to go as far as some competitors. Rather than calling for national legalization, he wants the drug to no longer be a Schedule 1 controlled substance so it can be studied.
He doesnât think the federal government âshould come in and tell every state that it should be legal,â believing states should make their own determinations.
âI trust this process by which states should be the models of, or laboratories of, democracy,â he said.
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Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press Writer Gene Johnson in Seattle contributed. Blood is a member of APâs marijuana beat team. Follow our complete marijuana coverage: https://apnews.com/Marijuana .