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UK: One in four believe sale of cannabis should be legalised

Anthony King

The Telegraph

Monday 26 Jan 2004

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The Home Secretary's decision to downgrade cannabis from a class B to a class C
drug has majority support among the public, according to YouGov's survey for
The Telegraph.

The survey reveals that more than half of all adults would be happy to see its
sale and possession decriminalised or even legalised.

The great majority reserve their fear and detestation for hard drugs such as
heroin and crack cocaine. Nearly everyone believes these to be seriously
addictive and almost invariably harmful to users.

The survey also reveals a gap amounting to a chasm between those under the age
of 35 and older generations. Those born in the Seventies and Eighties share
their elders' abhorrence of hard drugs but are much less convinced that the
country suffers from a serious drugs problem or that soft drugs are a scourge.

The gap even extends to beliefs about which "drugs" are addictive. The young,
by a wide margin, reckon that tobacco, alcohol and coffee are all more
addictive than cannabis and ecstasy. The old agree about the first two but are
not so sure about coffee.

YouGov's survey is one of the most comprehensive to be conducted into the
public's beliefs about drugs.

The pollsters began by asking people to assess the extent of the drugs problem
in Britain. As the figures at the top of the chart show, roughly half of
YouGov's respondents, 51 per cent, believe "there is a serious drugs problem in
this country and it affects practically the whole country".

Somewhat fewer, 42 per cent, agree there is a serious problem but believe "it
is largely confined to certain neighbourhoods and certain kinds of people".
Already, however, the generation gap emerges. As the figures show, the
under-35s are far more likely than their elders to reckon that there is no
nationwide problem.

The young also differ sharply from the middle-aged and older people in wanting
to distinguish clearly between hard and soft drugs. Opinion among the over-35s
is almost evenly divided on the issue. Among the younger generation a
substantial majority, 73 per cent, believe "a distinction should be made
between 'hard' drugs such as heroin and crack cocaine and 'soft' drugs such as
cannabis".

Asked which drugs are seriously addictive, people agree on putting heroin,
crack cocaine, tobacco and alcohol at the top of the list and cannabis and
ecstasy towards the bottom, though, once again, older generations are more
suspicious than the young of so-called softer drugs.

On the connection between cannabis use and the abuse of hard drugs, the old and
young are more closely aligned. Both groups broadly agree that cannabis users
are more likely than others to use hard drugs but whereas only half of the
18-34 age group, exactly 50 per cent, believe cannabis users are "a lot" or
"somewhat" more likely than others to resort to hard drugs, that proportion
among older people rises to nearly two thirds, 63 per cent.

In other words, younger people are considerably more likely than their elders
to see drug abuse as varied and complex rather than uniform.

Asked what they believe establishes any connection that exists between hard-
and soft-drug use, an overwhelming majority of YouGov's respondents, 83 per
cent, appear to be clear that the problem arises not from cannabis creating a
craving for harder drugs but "because some people who use cannabis find
themselves part of a 'drug culture' with dealers pushing both hard and soft
drugs".

The belief that pushers have a financial interest in selling both soft and hard
drugs - and in encouraging soft-drug users to move on to the hard stuff - may
help explain the widespread support for cannabis being decriminalised and even
legalised. Almost everyone believes that hard drugs harm all or most of those
who use them.

However, there is nothing approaching unanimity on the issue of whether soft
drugs such as cannabis also cause harm. Among the young, 53 per cent reckon
cannabis harms either none of those who use it or only a minority but among the
over-35s, almost exactly the same proportion, 50 per cent, reckon that
cannabis, on the contrary, harms all or most of those who use it.

No one disputes that the sale and use of drugs leads to the commission of
additional drug-related crimes. The main issue in dispute is the link between
the two. As the figures in the chart make clear, the great majority of YouGov's
respondents are in no doubt. Fully 91 per cent believe drug addicts turn to
crime "because they steal to get money to buy drugs". Only a small minority,
seven per cent, attribute drug-related crime primarily to "mental instability".
The section of the chart headed "Drugs and the law" presents probably YouGov's
most striking findings: only a minority of people, 43 per cent, believe that
"the sale and possession of soft drugs such as cannabis should remain a
criminal offence".

A clear majority, 51 per cent, including no fewer than 64 per cent among the
under-35s, believe that cannabis should either become a minor offence
("decriminalised") or even no offence at all ("legalised"). Almost exactly the
same proportion, 52 per cent, applaud David Blunkett's decision to reclassify
cannabis as a relatively harmless class C drug. That said, the present very
hard line on hard drugs remains. As the figures in the chart show, fewer than
10 per cent of YouGov's respondents favour changing the law in any respect.

If the laws on drugs were changed, a large proportion - 56 per cent among the
young rising to 67 per cent among older generations - reckon that drug use
would increase. The fact that many of these same people favour relaxing the
existing laws on cannabis probably means that they think the increase would be
mainly among cannabis rather than hard-drug users.

YouGov elicited the opinions of 2,536 adults across Britain online between Jan
20 and 22. The data have been weighted to conform to the demographic profile of
British adults as a whole.

Anthony King is professor of government at Essex University.

 

 

 

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