July
26, 2002
Editorial
Toledo
Blade
Congress
should spend more time listening to the people it represents, especially
when 500,000 of them live in the District of Columbia and aren’t allowed
a congressman.
U.S.
senators and representatives have resisted legitimizing the medical
use of marijuana in the District, even though voters in Arizona, Alaska,
California, Colorado, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington have approved
laws to that end. In fact, so have D.C. voters, but to no avail.
The
U.S. Supreme Court has put more stock in laws passed by Congress than
in initiatives passed by the people, giving the former sway over the
latter. That has led to federal raids on state-approved marijuana
clinics. These served primarily persons with pain, nausea, or lack
of appetite due to chemotherapy or AIDS. And the Congress overrode
a 1998 initiative by voters in the District who had voted 69 percent
to 31 percent to permit marijuana’s medicinal use.
The
Marijuana Policy Project points to a recent national Zogby poll which
found that, by a 62.5 percent to 24.1 percent margin, American voters
thought Congress should let the District’s medical marijuana law take
effect without interference.
All
the past meddling has done is make shockingly and distastefully clear
that the half-million Americans living in the District have roughly
the same democratic rights as Iraqis.
Now
as voters in the nation’s capital again consider the issue of medical
marijuana usage, the MPP expects a renewed congressional effort to
pre-empt the people’s will via a rider attached to the congressional
appropriation, an effort it hopes to thwart.
As
it stands, groups as varied as the American Public Health Association
and the Gray Panthers support the initiative. It’s time not only for
members of Congress to respect the will of the people in the District
but in the eight other states that have passed similar measures. They
must not only accept D.C. voter initiatives, they must enact federal
legislation that is more in line with the sweep of public opinion.
The
nation’s own Institute of Medicine acknowledged in 1999 the usefulness
of marijuana for some very ill patients. Congress should not be in
the business of withholding medicine that works.
In
the first go-round the law mooting the D.C. initiative was passed
by voice vote. This year the Marijuana Policy Project is working to
assure a roll call vote that will let Americans know who’s for them
and who isn’t. In a tight election year, with a tanking economy imperiling
incumbents, members of Congress should think twice about thwarting
the people’s will.