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UK: Q: Mr Howard, have you ever smoked dope? A: No comment

Andrew Grice, Political Editor

The Independent

Friday 23 Jan 2004

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Michael Howard refuses to answer, despite pledging that his party would
reverse the Government's reclassification of marijuana

It is the question that most politicians dread: "Have you ever smoked
cannabis?" David Blunkett tried to turn the tables on Michael Howard
yesterday by challenging him to say whether he had ever used the drug after
the Tory leader pledged to reverse the Government's decision to downgrade
cannabis.

The Home Secretary unwittingly provoked a fresh controversy about whether
politicians should be required to disclose their own experiences with drugs
in their younger days. Mr Howard, in an interview in The Independent
yesterday, accused the Government of creating a "muddle" by deciding to
reclassify cannabis as a Class C drug, but refused to disclose whether he
had ever used it himself.

Mr Blunkett told BBC Radio 4: "Let's ask him [Mr Howard] 'Did you ever
smoke it?'" Asked what his response would be if Mr Howard were to admit he
had smoked cannabis, Mr Blunkett said: "I would say fine, thanks for being
honest, now what would you have done to you? What would your parents have
said if we had picked you up for smoking it, criminalised you and had you
banged up in jail?"

The Home Secretary said he had never smoked cannabis. "But if I had, I
would be quite transparent about it because 40-odd per cent of under
30-year-olds have," he said.

Inevitably, Mr Blunkett was asked if Tony Blair had ever taken the drug. He
said: "Goodness me, he played the guitar very well, but it is not
synonymous with having a puff."

Downing Street was less than amused that Mr Blunkett's remarks prompted
questions about Mr Blair's personal history. The Prime Minister's official
spokesman tried to play down the remarks as "political knockabout" and
declined to say whether Mr Blair had ever smoked cannabis.

Outlining the Tories' strategy during a visit to Hertfordshire yesterday,
Mr Howard again refused to discuss his personal drugs policy in the 1960s.

He said: "No, that's not a question I am going to answer. When the
Government was asked in October 2000, all the ministers said we are not
going to answer that question, and I don't think it would be sensible - I
don't want you to go round all the Shadow Cabinet asking the question."

In October 2000 there was a fiasco over the "zero tolerance" drugs policy
announced by Ann Widdecombe, then shadow Home Secretary, at the Tories'
annual conference. She proposed UKP100 in fixed-penalty fines for people
caught even with small amounts of cannabis. But her policy went up in smoke
after seven senior Tories admitted that they had smoked cannabis in their
youth: Oliver Letwin, who said his pipe had been "spiked" with the drug;
David Willetts; Francis Maude; Peter Ainsworth; Archie Norman; Bernard
Jenkin and Lord Strathclyde. "The magnificent seven," as Tory aides
described them, became eight when Tim Yeo admitted that he also had
experimented with cannabis as a student.

Such recreational pursuits were not, of course, confined to Tories. Some
Labour ministers have also admitted smoking cannabis in the past -
including Caroline Flint, the Home Office minister who yesterday launched a
UKP1m advertising campaign to explain the reclassification of cannabis.

Yvette Cooper, a minister in John Prescott's Office of the Deputy Prime
Minister, gave an unusually straight answer to the question most
politicians dread when she appeared on BBC Radio 4's Any Questions the week
after the Tory policy collapsed. She said: "I did try cannabis while at
university, like a lot of students at that time, and it is something that I
have left, you know, behind, and it was several years ago."

Most of the other Labour ministers were less forthcoming. They were advised
by Downing Street to tell prying journalists: "We don't take part in surveys."

Mo Mowlam, the former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, was one of
the few prepared to speak her mind and admit that she had smoked cannabis.
As a Cabinet Office minister, she was responsible for the Government's
drugs policy but failed to wean her cabinet colleagues off the hardline
approach adopted by Mr Blair, who once carpeted Clare Short for suggesting
that cannabis should be legalised.

Since leaving Parliament, Ms Mowlam has called for the legalisation of all
drugs, including heroin and cocaine. She said in 2002 that the money raised
from taxing drugs could be used to treat addicts. She said: "If the kids
get hold of it because it's a high, they will get hold of it. Why not
regulate it, take the tax from it and deal with addiction?"

Ms Mowlam also admitted that she had inhaled, unlike Bill Clinton, who
fittingly adopted the "third way" policy of saying that he had tried
cannabis but did not inhale it - rather similar to his reply to the Monica
Lewinsky question.



'Did you ever smoke it?'

Tony Blair: "The one thing my father really drummed into me was never to
take drugs."

David Blunkett: "I never felt the need to try drugs. Life was challenging
enough without getting stoned."

Mo Mowlam: "I did inhale" [unlike former US president Bill Clinton]

Archie Norman: "I don't regret having done it. You expect people to
experiment. If you don't you haven't been young."

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