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UK: Home Secretary took cannabis as a student
The Independent
Thursday 19 Jul 2007 Home Secretary Jacqui Smith admitted today that she smoked cannabis when she was at university. Ms Smith was asked on GMTV whether she had taken the drug while talking about the Prime Minister's announcement yesterday that there would be a review of the drug's classification. She immediately responded: "I have. I did when I was at university. I haven't done for at least 25 years." Ms Smith told the programme: "I think it was wrong that I smoked it when I did. I have not done for 25 years. I share other people's concerns about the effect that cannabis has on young people and mental health problems. "So, actually I think in some ways I have learnt my lesson and I have a responsibility as Home Secretary now to make sure we put in place the laws and the support and information to make sure we carry on bringing cannabis use down, which we are doing." Asked how she felt about people who thought her admission might make her unfit to be Home Secretary, she said: "On the whole I think people think human beings should do jobs like this. I am not proud about it, I did the wrong thing. "One of the things about being a politician is that you are often criticised for not knowing what's going on. I hope that my experiences in my life have actually helped me understand that I do want crime tackled..." Appearing later on Sky News, Ms Smith faced more questions about her drug use and insisted she had only ever taken cannabis. She said: "I have never taken any other drugs." Asked how she could carry on as Home Secretary after her admission, she said: "I am not sitting here preaching to anybody. I was wrong when I did it more than 25 years ago. I am not looking to excuse that." People would expect her to be honest and do what she was elected to do and, in the end, would judge her on that basis, Ms Smith said. When she tried to say that many other people - including those in the Sky studio - had probably done the same, she was cut short and told those people were not in Government or making public policy. Faced with this, she again insisted: "I am not sitting here trying to excuse myself. I was wrong and I think drugs are wrong, and that is why I have been part of a Government that has helped to double the number of people who are in treatment. "It is why I am pleased that the figures show there are fewer people now taking cannabis..." In a bid to move the debate back to policy, she said she would be focusing on how to cut crime and make communities safer rather than what she did 25 years ago. But the subject would not die, and she was asked if Mr Brown was aware that she had taken the drug when he offered her one of the top jobs in Government. She said: "The PM did not ask me but I was asked this morning and I answered the question." Asked if she agreed with the reclassification plan, she said: "I do think there are lots of people who share my concerns that what we have seen in recent years is an increase in the strength of some forms of cannabis. "We have seen clear evidence of the link to mental health problems and it is right that we should now look at whether or not cannabis should be reclassified from C to B to send out a strong message about its use, to build on the progress we have already seen in actually cutting the use of cannabis and the sort of crime related to wider drug use." Ms Smith sought to distance herself from Tory leader David Cameron, who has consistently refused to confirm or deny that he has ever used cannabis in the past. She told GMTV it was up to him to refuse to talk about the issue and claim it was a private matter, but criticised the way he has not followed through in being tough on crime. She said: "What I am more worried about is actually that when he is given the chance to vote, for example, for some of the tougher measures we have put in place to tackle crime, he has turned his back on that opportunity. "The trouble with David Cameron is not what he has or hasn't done in his private life. It's that he likes to talk tough on crime but when it comes to a chance to make a difference, he hasn't done." http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2783243.ece
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