Political Hotsheet
March 11, 2009 12:47 PM

Biden Introduces Drug Czar Nominee

(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Lauding him as the most qualified person to reduce illegal drug use in the United States, Vice President Joe Biden today introduced the Obama administration’s nominee to be the new drug czar, Seattle police chief Gil Kerlikowske.

Biden, who was central to the creation of the Office Of National Drug Control Policy, said the economy suffers $350 billion a year in costs resulting from drug and alcohol abuse – and said there is an “even bigger cost in human suffering.”

Kerlikowske, meanwhile, said that reducing illegal drugs is “largely dependent on our ability to reduce demand for them – and that starts with our youth.”

He referenced on his own stepson Jeffrey’s drug arrests, noting that “in my own family, I have experienced the effects that drugs can have on our youth, our families and our communities.”

According to the Washington Times, Kerlikowske's stepson is now being held without bail in a Florida jail, apparently because of a parole violation.

As director of the Office Of National Drug Control Policy, Kerlikowske would coordinate drug policy across the government. The nomination is subject to Senate confirmation.

Kerlikowske has been Seattle’s police chief for nine years and has 36 years of law enforcement experience, and during his tenure in Seattle crime rates have fallen to record lows.

Biden stressed that Kerlikowske faces “daunting” challenges in the Southwest thanks to drug trafficking from Mexico, a concern echoed by President Obama in a statement on Kerlikowske’s nomination.

"With escalating violence along our Southwest border and far too many suffering from the disease of addiction here at home, never has it been more important to have a national drug control strategy guided by sound principles of public safety and public health,” the president said. “We must demonstrate to our international partners, the criminal organizations threatening to undermine stability and the rule of law in those nations, and the American people, that we take seriously our responsibility to reduce drug use in the United States.”

Biden, who lauded drug courts, prisoner re-entry programs and the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) program in his remarks, added in a statement that Kerlikowske “understands that combating drugs requires a comprehensive approach that includes enforcement, prevention and treatment.”

President Obama has specified that drug czar will no longer be a Cabinet-level position, as it was under President George W. Bush, though the White House stresses that Kerlikowske will have direct access to the president.
Tags:
Gil Kerlikowske ,
drug czar ,
joe biden
Topics:
Domestic Issues
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Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 6:31 PM EDT
ghostofwallygeorge: is demornay anywhere around?
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by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 6:16 PM EDT
dongo3: communist dictator, eh? you sure are a shrewd student of the political landscape.
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by ghostofwallygeorge March 11, 2009 6:16 PM EDT
Medical Marijuana
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by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 5:52 PM EDT
anti-zion: i haven't been at the puking stage in about 10 years. i don't miss it.
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by scottyusa March 11, 2009 5:31 PM EDT
If ever there was a war we should declare over and a position we should delete it is the drug czar and his army of zealots. What is this czar stuff anyways? Do we admire Russia so much that we steal their titles?
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by gce651 March 11, 2009 5:26 PM EDT
Please end the ineffective and costly current war on drugs!

LEGALIZE/DECRIMINALIZE MARIJUANA.

We've created a whole criminal class of millions of Americans by locking up people for petty drug crimes and use.

Time for a reasonable, rational change.
Reply to this comment
by ajmarine2 March 11, 2009 5:20 PM EDT
The current Acting Director is Edward Jurith; his position ubiquitously is nicknamed the Drug Czar, a term first used in the media by then-Senator Joe Biden in October 1982


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_National_Drug_Control_Policy
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by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 5:20 PM EDT
noloyalisti: in a sense, he is going after the legal drug pushers. i can't help but feel that if pot is legalized, less alcohol will be consumed. after all, pot is a much more pleasant "high" and even if you overdo it, there is no hangover, and you don't puke on your shoes
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by quapawsix March 11, 2009 5:14 PM EDT
Write your representative in Washington and tell them enough is enough stop the wasteful spending and legalize NOW
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by noloyalisti March 11, 2009 5:09 PM EDT
Should not this person also go after the LEGAL drug pushers at the big pharmaceutical companies? And the doctors they pay to push "legal" and harmful drugs on the public rat population (and are paid off by big pharma)?
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by ajmarine2 March 11, 2009 5:05 PM EDT
If California legalizes marijuana ...you will see a boom in new population moving there.......enough to shift the number of congressional seats in congress.


Posted by tincup356 at 1:58 PM : Mar 11, 2009




It will take a state like California to say "enough with the stupid pot laws already"; before anything can begin to change Nation wide on the issue.
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by tincup356 March 11, 2009 4:58 PM EDT
If California legalizes marijuana ...you will see a boom in new population moving there.......enough to shift the number of congressional seats in congress.
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by excoachken March 11, 2009 4:56 PM EDT
We need someone with more "hands on" experience it addiction and drug trade---- like Rush Limppaugh.
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by quapawsix March 11, 2009 4:55 PM EDT
A, a, uh I for got what i was going to say man
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by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 4:47 PM EDT
redwilma: good post. i agree. coming at this with cops at the helm is asking for the same old failed policies
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by ajmarine2 March 11, 2009 4:34 PM EDT
In a rare bit of sanity from a California politician, Assemblyman Tom Ammiano has begun to argue for the legalization of marijuana in California.


Buoyed by the widely held belief that cannabis is California?s biggest cash crop, Assemblyman Tom Ammiano contends it is time to reap some state revenue from that harvest while putting a damper on drug use by teens, cutting police costs and even helping Mother Nature.

[...]

Ammiano?s measure, AB 390, would essentially replicate the regulatory structure used for beer, wine and hard liquor, with taxed sales barred to anyone under 21.

He said it would actually boost public safety, keeping law enforcement focused on more serious crimes while keeping marijuana away from teenagers who can readily purchase black-market pot from peers.

The natural world would benefit, too, from the uprooting of environmentally destructive backcountry pot plantations that denude fragile ecosystems, Ammiano said.

But the biggest boon might be to the bottom line. By some estimates, California?s pot crop is a $14-billion industry, putting it above vegetables ($5.7 billion) and grapes ($2.6 billion). If so, that could mean upward of $1 billion in tax revenue for the state each year.

He?ll get no argument from me?the current criminalization of marijuana is beyond ridiculous, and causes suffering and injustice well beyond any rational justification. Of course, there?s no way this bill will pass, but I?m glad that somebody is putting the idea out there.
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by noloyalisti March 11, 2009 4:30 PM EDT
I have a new sign for our weekly peace vigil here in town. It says "Support War on Congress". We need to get rid of ALL the failed Republicons and at least half the Dems who are bought and paid for. Then we can have the REAL change we need. Seize the personal assets of the rich and corporate criminals who turned us into a 3rd world country.
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by tincup356 March 11, 2009 4:25 PM EDT
Our government created the drug wars they declared war first,,,,,,,the war on drugs is the cause of all the problems they say they are fighting.....when you outlaw drugs you create the black market for them and countless dollars are spent on BOTH sides of the issue.,,,,,,Marijuana is no more harmful than alcohol or ANY of the drugs that major drug companies try to impose upon the people legally. legalization would create millions of jobs and billions in revenues,,,,Why doe America KEEP dumping money into the endless line of wars on everything, when we are going broke doing it?......Congress is incapable of solving anything...to do so they would first have to admit ...ALL our problems were of congress's making.....and you will never get anyone in Washington to admit they have ever done wrong or made a mistake.....But to stop the war on drugs would free up prison space and court dockets to go after crimes with REAL victims.....like corporate and investment fraud.......seems like they are the criminals who have brought the hurt down on America,,,,not the pot smokers.
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by redwilma March 11, 2009 4:11 PM EDT
I wish we had a logical reasonable drug policy. First, legalize marijuana, tax it and free up prison space. Second, give everyone a shot at rehab (even if they're a poor minority) and one relapse before thinking about incarceration. Third, no mandatory drug sentencing. Take it on a case by case basis. Prisoners cost a lot of money. No sense wasting it on those who can actually be a productive member of society.

I kind of wish we had a scientist as a drug czar rather than another law enforcement type. I think they're just coming from a place that hasn't proven to be very helpful.
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by honestabe8 March 11, 2009 3:58 PM EDT
One of the many things that ticks me off is the lack of good dialogue on issues that face this country. Democrats sniping at Republicans, Republicans ******** about Democrats. Divisiveness is harming this country, but some folks can only see far enough to take shots at people with whom they disagree.
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