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How to Get Politicians to Admit in Public That the Drug War Has Been a Complete Failure

We do not need yet another blue ribbon commission or academic study to tell us our current policies are not working.

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June 26th was the UN’s World Anti-Drug Day. China usually celebrates  the day with mass executions and officials in other countries will trot  out the usual speeches about the need to continue the war on drugs with  ever greater determination. Yet despite a chorus of legal, military, law  enforcement and public health voices calling for fundamental reform of  our drug policies, their voices have largely fallen on deaf ears when it  comes to elected officials. We do not need yet another blue ribbon  commission or academic study to tell us our current policies are not  working. So why does this zombie drug war continue to march on and what  can be done to stop it?

Those who have worked on this issue know one of the most cynical  secrets in Washington: many elected officials (if not an outright  majority) are willing to acknowledge the fundamental failure of the drug  war in private, but continue to vote in favor of it when the yeas and  nays are called. Drug policy reform fails to get traction with elected  officials because it is the quintessential "third-rail" political issue  -- it’s a subject to avoid unless one is declaring support for the  status quo. As Jean-Claude Juncker, Prime Minister of Luxembourg, said,  “We all know what to do, but we don’t know how to get re-elected once we  have done it.” Although Juncker was referring to economic  liberalization, the quote is even more applicable to the war on drugs.

The disconnect between private and public views of elected officials  has to do with the difficulty in explaining why “get tough” measures  sound attractive to voters but are often counterproductive. Politicians  must hope the voters will have some basic understanding of the economics  of drug prohibition and how escalating the drug war only makes the  drugs more valuable, thus attracting even more participants into the  drug economy. But that can be tough when political challengers can run  negative smear ads relatively cheaply and repeatedly to decimate their  opponent’s poll numbers. Very few politicians are able to convey  successfully such a paradigm shift in a soundbite. After all, if drugs  are bad, why not wage a war against them?

Politicians are loath to go on record voting against drug war  measures. Since Congress installed an electronic voting system in 1973,  the number of recorded votes has soared because it became so much  easier. The reason so many votes are on record (as opposed to a voice  vote or simple head count) is not so average citizens can hold their  representatives accountable for their votes. After all, the overwhelming  majority of voters have never looked up their representative’s voting  record. Those recorded votes are for the benefit of the political  parties so that they can put their adversary’s votes on record to  spotlight at a future time—usually during election season (e.g., “He  voted for war funding before he voted against it”). So voicing support  for drug policy reform is somewhat analogous to placing a loaded pistol  on the table and praying your political challenger will not shoot you in  the face with it. On-the-record votes also let lobbyists and pressure  groups know they’ve bought their money’s worth of loyalty.

In recent years, campaign strategists like Karl Rove have taken  traditional wedge issues and refined them into what he calls “anger  points”— issues that have complex and often counterintuitive solutions,  but are extremely easy to take out of context and twist into an  effective attack ad.

The degeneration of our political discourse and campaign tactics has  made reforming the drug war synonymous with political suicide. So how  can politicians who care about getting re-elected make fundamental  reforms without being electrocuted by the third rail? Just as the  much-needed reforms of U.S. drug policy are counter-intuitive (where  being tough is often the opposite of being effective), so too is the way  out of this political stalemate. In order to get a more responsible  legislature, it may be better to have less accountability—at least  temporarily.

By utilizing a non-binding, anonymous straw poll, elected officials  can express their true leanings without feeling the political backlash  from myriad sources. While such a measure would have to be used as a  “non-binding procedural aid” (the Constitution requires a recorded vote  if one-fifth of the quorum requests it), an anonymous straw poll can  produce surprising results and offer political cover during the debate  over the real vote. Oscar Wilde once said that if you give a man a mask,  he will tell you the truth. This temporary “veil of conscience” would  allow members of Congress to express their true sentiments without  crossing their party leadership, political donors, lobbyists and even  their own electorate. For one brief moment, politicians can vote for the  nonpartisan common good as they truly perceive it.

If the straw poll results show there is considerable dissension  regarding a third-rail issue, then members who wish to vote against it  can argue they represent the true majority of Congress. To be blunt,  many of our elected leaders are essentially herd animals. When they  detect significant movement, they often follow because there is  political safety in numbers. In this way, anonymous straw polls  potentially can become the catalyst for a stampede. It is a way to  manufacture a tipping point that may already exist, but in nascent  form.

In theory, this could be used for nefarious purposes. But if one  party wanted to conspire to sway the vote, how could the party  leadership enforce voting discipline with a secret ballot? Moreover, how  can a loyal party partisan game the system to take credit when they  can’t prove which way he voted? The concept is not unlike a traditional  firing squad where one shooter is randomly given a rifle with a blank  cartridge so the group can sleep with an easier conscience – at least in  theory. In anonymity, honesty can emerge long enough for elected  officials to realize they are in fact in a “closeted” majority.

This exercise in distributed responsibility could provide the  solution for Congress to address other polarizing issues such as  economic restructuring due to climate change, national health care or  authorizations for war. It can also be used to quickly dispense with  election-year gimmicks (silly season, as candidate Obama called it) such  as anti-flag burning amendments.

Every politician understands what is in his or her short-term  interest. They know what the party leadership wants, what their campaign  contributors want, and what lobbyists want. At what point does the  long-term interest of the nation as a whole come into play? Who  represents the interests of future generations? Today, our future is  determined by cowardly politicians who can only think as far as the next  election. Our economy is guided by short-sighted corporations that only  care about hitting their quarterly numbers, lest their stock nosedives  and they get taken over by a rival corporation.

An anonymous straw poll can create a temporary firewall separating  politics from policies—or what Scott McClellan, George W. Bush’s former  White House press secretary, called “the permanent campaign.” Indeed,  this may be the only viable way to undo the polarizing legacy of Karl  Rove. With so many crises to address and such powerful interests  opposing reforms, Washington cannot afford to play partisan games and  conduct business as usual. Those who were elected based on a pledge of a  “different kind of politics” in a year of “change” should consider this  method of cutting the Gordian knot and breaking the logjam in  Washington.

Sanho Tree is a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies in  Washington, D.C. and directs its Drug Policy Project.

This article originally appeared on Alternet.

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