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Canada's New Prime Minister Takes Tough Stance on Marijuana Laws

Clifford Krauss

New York Times

Monday 03 Apr 2006

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TORONTO, April 3 — Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Monday that
he was scrapping draft legislation to decriminalize possession of small
amounts of marijuana, a measure that had been strongly criticized by the
Bush administration.

The move was not unexpected, because his Conservative Party had opposed
the measure. But it was symbolically important coming on the first day
that the new Parliament convened and only days after Mr. Harper's first
meeting as prime minister with President Bush, at a summit meeting in
Mexico.

Mr. Harper announced the move during a speech to the Canadian
Professional Police Association in which he pledged to toughen sentences
for drug and gun crimes, tighten parole rules, strengthen controls on
child pornography and expand the national databank of DNA samples for
convicted criminals.

"We are going to hold criminals to account," said Mr. Harper, who was
elected in January. "If you do a serious crime, you're going to do
serious time."

The former Liberal government had drafted the legislation, which would
have made possession of less than 15 grams of marijuana a minor offense
punishable by fines of between $100 and $400. Those found with small
amounts would no longer have a criminal record.

Several American officials had warned that the legislation would force
the United States to increase its inspections at the border and thereby
risk creating more delays for trade and tourists. It was also viewed by
American officials as a harmful symbol when the Canadian marijuana
industry, which is estimated to generate as much as $8.5 billion
annually, is spreading across the country and exporting widely in the
United States.

The legislation was also opposed by local Canadian police departments.

The proposed law, drafted three years ago, was never brought to a vote.
But it remained an irritant in relations between Canada and the United
States, especially as the Canadian police have made fewer and fewer
arrests for marijuana possession in recent years.

The three opposition parties are not expected to try to resuscitate the
legislation, although together they control a majority in the House of
Commons.

The Toronto Star reported Monday that local police officers around the
metropolitan Toronto area had taken their cue from the new Harper
government and had begun cracking down on possession of marijuana in
recent weeks.

Mr. Harper's emphasis on reducing crime is part of a broader pattern to
emphasize policies that are not likely to bring much opposition, like
fighting government corruption, cutting the national sales tax and
reducing waiting time for health care.

Because the opposition parties, all to the left of his Conservatives,
have the power to bring down the government if they unite against him,
Mr. Harper apparently is treading carefully so as not to antagonize them.

The most contentious issue in the new Parliament is child-care policy.
The Conservatives prefer granting direct allowances to families with
small children while the opposition prefers the establishment of a
national child-care program.

 

 

 

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