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Gary Johnson, GOP Presidential Candidate, Would Consider Full Pardons For Nonviolent Marijuana Offenders

Gary Johnson Marijuana

First Posted: 10/19/11 06:41 PM ET Updated: 10/19/11 06:49 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- GOP presidential candidate Gary Johnson says he would consider issuing a full presidential pardon for anyone serving a prison sentence for marijuana.

Asked in a conference call with reporters on Wednesday if he'd consider pardoning all nonviolent marijuana offenders currently serving a prison sentence, Johnson replied, "Yes."

The position is part of what he calls a "rational drug policy," ThinkProgress' Alex Seitz-Wald first reports, "which starts with looking at the drug problem or the drug issue first as a health issue rather [than] a criminal justice issue."

With around 800,000 arrests made annually by state-level officials for marijuana offenses, a presidential pardon might not be the most practical solution, but it is, Johnson has argued, a politically viable one. Along with Texas Rep. Ron Paul, whom he endorsed in 2008, Johnson is an unabashed libertarian, and he has said repeatedly that legalizing marijuana is a popular stance when it comes to electoral politics.

"Pot smokers may be the largest untapped voting bloc in the country," he said in an interview with Outside Magazine. "A hundred million Americans have smoked marijuana. You think they want to be considered criminals?"

The former New Mexico governor has been open with the media about his own experiences smoking pot. After a paragliding accident in 2005, Johnson told The 420 Times that "marijuana really helped [him] deal" with the pain, and in an interview with The New Republic he joked, "I never exhaled."

That he garners less than 1 percent of the vote in national polls and has been excluded from several presidential debates doesn't help his argument for political viability, but such assertions are not the only reason to think that marijuana legalization is gaining traction as a serious political issue.

A record-high 50 percent of Americans favor legalizing marijuana, according to a Gallup poll released on Monday. And those numbers, up from just 36 percent in 2006, could have significant implications for state and federal marijuana policy.

"Where is the political leadership that should be reflecting that common sense belief?" asked Johnson in a statement after the poll results were released. "This may be the only issue on the national scene where half the American people support something, but zero percent, statistically speaking, of elected officials and politicians will publicly agree with them."

Support has spiked in the past five years, with 40 percent of respondents favoring legalization in 2009 before numbers jumped another 10 percent, according to the annual crime survey conducted Oct. 6-9, with majorities of men, liberals and 18- to 29-year-olds currently supporting the legalization of cannabis.

Such results have people talking about how, if current trends continue, legalizing medical marijuana could be a presidential campaign issue as soon as 2016.

"The fact that presidential candidates are now actively pointing out the need to end marijuana prohibition, combined with the new Gallup poll showing that more Americans support legalization than oppose it, shows that the time for reform has arrived," said Tom Angell, spokesman for legalization advocacy group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, on whose advisory board Johnson serves.

The poll numbers come as federal prosecutors are cracking down on medical marijuana dispensaries in California, vowing to shutter state-licensed marijuana shops regulated by local governments and threatening landlords with property seizures.

Johnson decried the federal crackdown on pot dispensaries on Wednesday's call, telling reporters that Obama broke campaign promises to maintain a hands-off approach toward pot clinics that adhere to state law, and that the crackdown "makes absolutely no sense whatsoever."

HuffPost reported on Sunday that the decision to initiate enforcement actions on medical pot establishments was a collective decision by four U.S. attorneys in California and not the result of any directive from Washington, according to a spokesman for California-based U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte Jr.

But some legalization advocates remain incredulous.

"I don't believe that for a second," said Steve De Angelo, executive director of Harborside, when told federal prosecutors said the decision for a crackdown was made in California. "The recent actions by the U.S. attorneys in California are part of what appears to be a coordinated multi-agency assault by the federal government on the entire medical cannabis community, and that assault seems to be directed at systems of regulated and licensed systems of cultivation and distribution."

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WASHINGTON -- GOP presidential candidate Gary Johnson says he would consider issuing a full presidential pardon for anyone serving a prison sentence for marijuana. Asked in a conference call with ...
WASHINGTON -- GOP presidential candidate Gary Johnson says he would consider issuing a full presidential pardon for anyone serving a prison sentence for marijuana. Asked in a conference call with ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
02:52 PM on 11/06/2011
you know...this is the problem right off the bat... Would Consider Full Pardons For Nonviolent Marijuana Offenders
would CONSIDER

The last guy said he WOULD change the law's focus, and now has gone 360 degrees around in a circle (right up to the petitions that TOLD him we want it legalized)
and then 180 degrees away from that promise.

At no doubt a cost in voters.
About 98 million to 125 million voters who either used to, or still do smoke receational pot once a month.
The additional 15 million using prescription marijuana.
The additional 37 million people who will be looking at breast, prostate, skin, and lung cancer and want the cure that cannabinoid oils provide.
And as for the 42 million people out of work, there are near a million jobs that could be had from legalizing cannabis in design, agriculture, manufacture, wholesale, retail, automobile industry, construction, fuel, food, and laughter.
08:13 AM on 10/23/2011
It's time we take our "FREE COUNTRY" back! Legalize marijuana and put the drug cartels out of business and put Americans back to work. Farmers would love planting their fields again. All they really need is sun and water to grow a cash crop. At least we know where its coming from. Put the tobacco plants back to work, making and packaging marijuana cigarettes and charge $50 a pack with taxes, there should be smoke shops to buy them in not your regular convience stores and grocery stores.

So many people use pot for medicinal purposes, like cancer, MS, anxiety problems and many other diseases, help sick people get the drug they really need. Marijuana will be the cash crop we need to make America whole again. Legalizing marijuana will stop alot of the true illegal drugs like meth, cocaine, heroin and prescription drugs. Alcohol in my book should not be legal because you DIE from alcohol abuse, never heard of death by marijuana. We see on the news about someone driving drunk, but never from smoking pot. I would ride in a car with someone who has smoked pot, but I would NEVER ride when someone that has been drinking. Who would you ride with? Prescription drugs are even worse, people are being robbed, beaten, and even killed over their prescription drugs. Who's to blame but the federal goverment.
08:08 AM on 10/23/2011
It's time to put the people back to work and get America back on its feet again!b But bthe farmers back to work and stop paying them not to farm their land,. Lets take one step forward and take two steps back and look at the big picture. Its time to legalize marijuana and put jobs in this country, people are gonna buy it whether its from here or other countries. Why not get it from our American farmers, it only takes sun and water to grow. Then theres the cigarette companies just wishing they could go back to work and package marijuana cigarette just like regular cigarettes but, put a price of $50 a pack, Thats thousands if not millions of jobs right there, counting the dispensaries and people to run them, Legalize it for food, heat and cloth, it can be done, the Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper! Let the dying be able to eat, and not be sick all the time.
08:05 PM on 10/22/2011
Petition (Online) >> Hurry up and sign now!!! >> Only 1 day until the deadline!!!
Prisoners being held for the peaceful, non-violen­t possession­, sale, transport or cultivatio­n of cannabis hemp must be released immediatel­y. Money and property seized must be returned. Criminal records must be wiped clean, amnesty granted and some sort of reparation­s paid for time served. These cannabis prisoners are the real victims of this monstrous crime against humanity called the “War on Drugs.”
Will you sign it?http://wh.­gov/gf3
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
03:19 PM on 11/06/2011
you didn't subscribe to the White House Newsletter, did you?

OK, please remain calm...put your hands in your pockets because keypads cost money, and mosy of that goes to China (did you know that fiber/composite and plasticized cannabis is used sometimes?)
We lost.

The CDC and the DEA and the NIH all came out and said "no. It's connected to addiction" (it isn't) "and that it has gateway tendencies" (again, no, it doesn't) and that there is no proof of any medical reason to smoke marijuana (yes, there is, when used in conjunction with the oil, it calms MS and CP tremors and, improves memories of Alzheimer patients)

"And with this new information (Anslinger used the same tripe back in the thirties and it has ALL been rebuked) Preventing drug use is the most cost-effective way to reduce drug use and its consequences in America." (no, it is NOT nor has it been in the last century of making it a crime.)

Sorry to bring you this bad news.
01:01 PM on 10/21/2011
GARY JOHNSON, PLEASE, PRETTY PLEASE SIGN THE ONLINE WHITE HOUSE PETITION TO END MARIJUANA PROHIBITION -there are only hours left to sign it! come on, Gary, come on!
http://wh.gov/gP1
case sensitive, upper case P

http://wh.gov/gP1
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
03:40 PM on 11/06/2011
by now you have heard.
It isn't going to happen so easily.
WHAT are we stacked up against?
Automobile manufacturers that don't want to hire more people to retool a fibercomposite car body (see: http://green.autoblog.com/2010/09/02/motive-doesnt-bogart-cannabis-car-info-passes-more-us-more-det/) even though they are more durable and cheaper to manufacture and are lightweight, which is what we NEED for electric and hybrid vehicles.
Alcohol industries.
Tobacco industries (because one CAN quit cigarette addiction with marijuana)
Asian clothing manufacturers.
Lumber industry (they didn't really want to supply us with wood, they only wanted a profit to strip our forests clean)
And incredible list of several industires associated with cannabis (http://green.autoblog.com/2010/09/02/motive-doesnt-bogart-cannabis-car-info-passes-more-us-more-det/) or (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zA7OfUYLO2c)
Pharmaceutical Corporations that want more profit now.

our government has been bought out from underneath us.
That's the problem in a nutshell.
01:05 AM on 10/21/2011
Jesus said to do unto others as we would have them to do unto us. None of us would want our child thrown in jail with the sexual predators over marijuana. None of us would want to see an older family member’s home confiscated and sold by the police for growing a couple of marijuana plants for their aches and pains. It’s time to stop putting our own family members in jail over marijuana.
If ordinary Americans could grow a little marijuana in their own back yards, it would be about as valuable as home-grown tomatoes. Let's put the criminals out of business and get them out of our neighborhoods. Let's let ordinary Americans grow a little marijuana in their own back yards.
You can email your Congressperson and Senators at http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml to discuss HR 2306, the bill that would repeal Federal prohibition.
And a big THANK YOU to the courageous, freedom loving legislators, governors, and countless others who are working so hard to bring this through! You’re doing a great patriotic service for all of America!

Here's one way that IT IS REALLY WORKING: Arresting the criminals and collecting a fee from registered growers (and bringing in thousands of dollars to support the county budget); what a great plan! This is the way to build a better America! http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/2011/07/the-pot-republic-one-sheriffs-quietly-radical-experiment.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brandt931
03:20 PM on 10/20/2011
I feel this would be a step in the right direction toward making Pot work to help our damaged economies. Marijuana is the safest drug with actual benefits for the user as opposed to alcohol which is dangerous, causes addiction, birth defects, and affects literally every organ in the body. Groups are organizing all over the country to speak their minds on reforming pot laws. I drew up a very cool poster for the cause which you can check out on my artist’s blog at http://dregstudiosart.blogspot.com/2011/01/vote-teapot-2011.html Drop in and let me know what you think!
01:04 PM on 10/20/2011
Increased risk of heart attack? Addictive? These guys are plain stupid!
"If they really did care they would let the FDA handle it cause they know whats best" BS!
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nlm0 0mln
Fightin' fires with unlit matches
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nlm0 0mln
Fightin' fires with unlit matches
10:54 AM on 10/20/2011
Do you see what's happening in Mexico right now? It's the direct result of our f'd up drug policies.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ronp121
10:06 AM on 10/20/2011
Bet that would never get by a republican house or senate. Good to say hard to back up. I've noticed politicians are likely to say anything for a vote. Once in office it is all forgotten. Should be done but won't happen with the republicans in office.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sock Monkey
Deceive. Inveigle. Obfuscate. The DC mantra.
10:25 AM on 10/20/2011
And it's not happening with the DEMS in office either which begs the question just how much influence do the private prison industry lobbyists have in this country?

ANSWER: Far too much for either side to do anything to disrupt their campaign cash flow.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:46 AM on 10/20/2011
Pardoning non violent pot offenders does not expunge their records... You need to go further to get the restrictive laws off of the books and clear violators records...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SweetestTaboo
08:20 AM on 10/20/2011
Sorry, the TPublicans would consider this an assault to small business....the Prison Industrial Complex, that is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Ruiz
10:46 AM on 10/20/2011
Really?
Ron Paul- Republican
Gary Johnson -Republican

How can you generalize like that?
12:57 PM on 10/20/2011
At least they would have a reason to back up why they disagree with it, no matter how ridiculous it is. Right now a democrat is in control and clearly does not have any interest in marijuana. The democrats have already shown there not going to do anything so why not give the republicans a chance.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
antipodal2u
Just say NO to hypocrisy
08:10 AM on 10/20/2011
What a waste of common sense. Johnson sould run as an independent or as VP to ron paul
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnnygoodwud
08:07 AM on 10/20/2011
never happen. the people who own/run the private jails, WE pay for with our tax dollars, and big pharm. have to much clout to get weed legalized.