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UK: Now SEVEN cabinet ministers admit:' We smoked cannabis'

thisislondon

Thursday 19 Jul 2007

---
Seven Cabinet ministers including the Home Secretary and Chancellor
smoked cannabis as students, it emerged today.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith began an extraordinary day of confessions,
saying: "I'm not proud about it. I did the wrong thing."

She was later joined by two of her junior ministers, Tony McNulty and
Vernon Coaker, who also said they took the drug as students.

Then to the astonishment of colleagues, Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly,
a devout Catholic, was next to admit she dabbled as an undergraduate.

Work and Pensions Secretary John Hutton announced that he was another
former cannabis user. With Communities Secretary Hazel Blears and
Housing Minister Yvette Cooper having come clean in the past, that added
up to five members of the Cabinet now saying they broke the law in their
youths.

A spokesman for Prime Minister Gordon Brown said it was a matter for
individual ministers "to decide how to answer these questions".

Mr McNulty told BBC News 24: "At university I encountered it, I smoked
it once or twice, and I don't think many people who were at university
at the time didn't at least encounter it."

Their candid admissions could open the door to other senior politicians
to speak more openly about their past. In previous years, Downing Street
has strongly discouraged Cabinet ministers from answering questions
about such things as drug abuse.

But the Daily Mail's sister paper, the Evening Standard, has learned
that Ms Smith informed Gordon Brown before speaking out and was told it
was up to her to decide how to handle the issue.

The Home Secretary is in charge of new moves to toughen the law on
cannabis and reverse the 2004 declassification of it from a Class B drug
to Class C - a step blamed for throwing the law into confusion and
encouraging more open use of the drug.

Asked about her own history, Ms Smith, 44, said she regretted using the
drug as an Oxford undergraduate. "I think it was wrong that I smoked it
when I did. I share other people's concerns about the effect that
cannabis has on young people and mental health problems.
Ruth Kelly

"Actually, in some ways, I've learned my lesson and I've got a
responsibility as Home Secretary now to make sure we put in place the
laws, the support, the information to make sure we carry on bringing
cannabis use down."

The minister said she had not touched the drug since leaving university.

And she denied her past made her unfit to be Home Secretary, saying
people preferred politicians to have experience of real life.

"You know, on the whole I think people want human beings to do jobs like
this," she said.

"I'm not proud about it. I did the wrong thing. But one of the things
about being a politician is that sometimes you are criticised for not
knowing what's going on.

"Well, I hope my experiences in my life have actually helped me to
understand that people do want crime tackled ... I know that because of
the people I have talked to and the life that I have lived and I think
that makes me more serious about tackling it."

Her frankness is bound to put pressure on Conservative leader David
Cameron to speak openly about his past drug use.

A biography of Mr Cameron disclosed that he was disciplined as a
15-year-old pupil at Eton for smoking cannabis. Police were called to
the school and some other boys who sold the drug were expelled.

Mr Cameron has refused to discuss the event, arguing that politicians
are entitled to "a private past" but says he never dabbled in drugs
while in public life.

Speaking in February, he said: "When younger, lots of people do things
that they shouldn't - I was one of them - and I regret those things but
I think people should judge me now on the policies we have put forward.î
Some critics have questioned whether he used drugs after leaving
university but before becoming an MP.

Asked on GMTV if the Tory leader should be more open, Ms Smith said:
"That's up to David Cameron."

Launching a new anti-crime strategy today, the minister said the review
of drugs laws would aim to help victims "get your head together, get
your life together".

She added: "The time is right, particularly as you get more dangerous
and stronger forms of cannabis, to look at whether or not it is right to
put that classification up to B. It's an important message and it says
something about the damage that drugs can do to you."

Ms Smith said the Prime Minister - who has said he never touched drugs
in his life - did not ask her if she had when he appointed her Home
Secretary.

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23404953-details/Now+SEVEN+cabinet+ministers+admit:'+We+smoked+cannabis'/article.do

 

 

 

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