News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Fort Langley-Aldergrove: Pot Party Leader Set To Battle |
Title: | CN BC: Fort Langley-Aldergrove: Pot Party Leader Set To Battle |
Published On: | 2005-02-22 |
Source: | Langley Advance (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-16 23:38:54 |
POT PARTY LEADER SET TO BATTLE COLEMAN
The leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party is setting his sights on
Langley and Solicitor General Rich Coleman.
The leader of a party that wants to legalize marijuana is going
head-to-head against B.C.'s top cop in the upcoming provincial election.
B.C. Marijuana Party's Marc Emery plans to run under his party's
banner in Fort Langley-Aldergrove.
"[Coleman] is public enemy number one to anybody in the cannabis
culture in British Columbia," Emery told the Langley Advance News on
Monday.
One of the BCMP's key goals in the 2005 election is to ensure the
defeat of Coleman, a man the party calls the "top prohibitionist" in
the B.C. Liberal government.
Emery, a Vancouver resident, admitted beating Coleman himself would be
unlikely.
"I'm hopeful to get a message out, but I'm very practical," he said.
What Emery wants is to make the voters of Aldergrove-Fort Langley
think twice about electing Coleman.
Many people in the riding may support Coleman's position, Emery said:
"I'd like to have an opportunity to convince them that that position
is bad."
Coleman disseminates falsehoods about marijuana, Emery said, such as the
drug is traded kilo-for-kilo for cocaine, and is linked to guns in
Afghanistan: "He's basically declared war on the province's number one
industry."
Coleman is not concerned.
"If the marijuana party wants to target Rich Coleman, the Solicitor
General, about a product that's illegal in this country, then bring it
on," he said during an interview with the Langley Advance News last
week
Coleman maintained pot is traded equally for cocaine, and that the
drug is connected with organized crime.
Coleman said he's "comfortable with everything I say" about the
marijuana issue.
There's no question everyone wants some reforms when it comes to the
issue of the laws and marijuana, he said: "But the first thing we need
to do is decide that we're going after the manufacture and
distribution of the drug itself as part of those reforms, before you
can talk about just an initiative to decriminalize."
The leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party is setting his sights on
Langley and Solicitor General Rich Coleman.
The leader of a party that wants to legalize marijuana is going
head-to-head against B.C.'s top cop in the upcoming provincial election.
B.C. Marijuana Party's Marc Emery plans to run under his party's
banner in Fort Langley-Aldergrove.
"[Coleman] is public enemy number one to anybody in the cannabis
culture in British Columbia," Emery told the Langley Advance News on
Monday.
One of the BCMP's key goals in the 2005 election is to ensure the
defeat of Coleman, a man the party calls the "top prohibitionist" in
the B.C. Liberal government.
Emery, a Vancouver resident, admitted beating Coleman himself would be
unlikely.
"I'm hopeful to get a message out, but I'm very practical," he said.
What Emery wants is to make the voters of Aldergrove-Fort Langley
think twice about electing Coleman.
Many people in the riding may support Coleman's position, Emery said:
"I'd like to have an opportunity to convince them that that position
is bad."
Coleman disseminates falsehoods about marijuana, Emery said, such as the
drug is traded kilo-for-kilo for cocaine, and is linked to guns in
Afghanistan: "He's basically declared war on the province's number one
industry."
Coleman is not concerned.
"If the marijuana party wants to target Rich Coleman, the Solicitor
General, about a product that's illegal in this country, then bring it
on," he said during an interview with the Langley Advance News last
week
Coleman maintained pot is traded equally for cocaine, and that the
drug is connected with organized crime.
Coleman said he's "comfortable with everything I say" about the
marijuana issue.
There's no question everyone wants some reforms when it comes to the
issue of the laws and marijuana, he said: "But the first thing we need
to do is decide that we're going after the manufacture and
distribution of the drug itself as part of those reforms, before you
can talk about just an initiative to decriminalize."
Member Comments |
No member comments available...